Daily News for June 15, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

California launches Mass Timber Coalition, links in-state manufacturing with forest health

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 15, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

California launched a Mass Timber Coalition, linking in-state manufacturing with forest health. In other news: the US Endowment announced funding for repurposing closed wood products manufacturing facilities; builders look to solve London’s housing crisis with timber; and Green Building Canada opines on life cycle analysis. Meanwhile: Unifor expressed concern for New Brunswick pulp mills; the US will retain duties on Chinese moulding and millwork; Canadian housing starts fell 6%; and US homebuilder and consumer sentiment rose but remain depressed. 

In Forestry/Climate news: the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says El Niño is growing in strength; new research says trees may store less carbon than expected; BC woodlot owners focus on practical solutions; an Ontario harvesting dispute is headed to a listening circle; Oregon uses AI to support species recovery; a battle is brewing over glyphosate near Lake Tahoe; and New Zealand’s FSC certification changes could reduce worker risks.

Finally: an Oregon chainsaw competition helps spark interest in forestry careers.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Letter to MP Wayne Long Re: Opportunities at AV Group NB

By Lana Payne, National President
Unifor Canada
June 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

I am writing today to bring to your attention concerns around two forestry mills operating in the province of New Brunswick, employing Unifor members. …Our members work at AV Group NB Nackawic (Unifor Local 219) and AV Group NB Atholville (Unifor Local 160), two mills that make dissolving grade pulp, which is processed for the manufacturing of viscose staple fibre for use in the textile industry. Recently, [these members] have been concerned about the future of the two mills. …Unifor believes that there are a number of opportunities to stabilize operations and build a sustainable and prosperous future at AV Group NB Nackawic and AV Group NB Atholville. The mills have access to a high quality and plentiful fibre basket, we believe the Government of New Brunswick will be supportive of investment at the mills, and – most importantly – our members at those facilities are highly-skilled, motivated, and well-trained.

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U.S. Endowment launches funding opportunity to assess closed wood products facilities for bioenergy development

US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
June 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities today launched a Request for Proposals (RFP) to assess the feasibility of repurposing closed wood products manufacturing facilities, including pulp and paper mills, for bioenergy. The initiative will make available up to $500,000 in pre-development funding to support one or two facilities across the United States. Across the country, idled wood products facilities have left behind industrial infrastructure, utility connections and skilled workforce capacity at a time when forest-dependent regions are urgently seeking new economic anchors. Since 2015, more than 40 U.S. pulp and paper mills have closed, removing roughly 60 million green tons of annual wood demand from rural communities. The Endowment’s market initiative seeks to determine whether these sites can be reactivated as biopower generation or biofuel production facilities, creating new markets for low-value wood fiber and supplying renewable energy to a growing economy.

 

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US to retain countervail and antidumping duties on wood mouldings and millwork products from China

US International Trade Commission
June 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The US International Trade Commission determined that revoking the existing countervailing and antidumping duty orders on wood mouldings and millwork products from China would likely lead to continuation or recurrence of material injury within a reasonably foreseeable time.  As a result of the Commission’s affirmative determinations, the existing orders on imports of this product from China will remain in place. …This action comes under the five-year (sunset) review process required by the Uruguay Round Agreements Act. See the attached page for background on these five-year (sunset) reviews. The Commission’s public report, Wood Mouldings and Millwork Products from China, will contain the views of the Commission and information developed during the reviews. The report will be available on the USITC website by July 22, 2026.

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Finance & Economics

Canada’s housing starts fall 6.1% in May

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation
June 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, Ontario — The six-month trend in housing starts was virtually flat in May, with a slight increase of 0.5% to 258,010 units, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). The trend measure is a six-month moving average of the seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of total housing starts for all areas in Canada. Actual monthly housing starts were down 5.2% year-over-year in centres with a population of 10,000 or more, with 22,633 units recorded in May, compared to 23,879 units in May 2025. The year-to-date total was 93,644 units, up 3% from the same period in 2025, driven by higher starts in British Columbia and Ontario, outweighing year-over-year decreases in the Prairies. The total monthly SAAR of housing starts for all areas in Canada decreased 6% in May (261,377 units) compared to April (278,380 units).

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Despite improvement in US consumer sentiment, views of the economy remain dour

By Joanne Hsu, Director
The University of Michigan
June 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

This month, consumer sentiment ticked up about four index points, or 9%, with consumers experiencing some relief due to the early-month easing in gasoline prices. This measured improvement in sentiment was widespread, seen across age, education, and political party. Lower-income consumers exhibited a particularly strong sentiment increase, consistent with the fact that gasoline comprises a larger share of their budgets. Overall, assessments and expectations of personal finances and business conditions all rose this month. Even with June’s early gains, however, views of the economy are still relatively dour. Sentiment is currently 13% below January 2026 and 19% below a year ago, as consumers remain focused on kitchen table issues. They feel burdened by the recent escalation in inflation and worry that higher inflation could remain stubborn going forward, particularly in the short run. Interviews for this release were completed between May 19 and June 8.

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US Builder Sentiment Remains Weak Amid Affordability Concerns

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
June 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Builder sentiment remains subdued as rising material costs, elevated mortgage rates and ongoing affordability challenges continue to strain the housing market. Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes fell two points to 35 in June, according to the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). This is the 14th straight month that sentiment has remained below 40, a streak not seen since 2011-2012 during the foreclosure crisis. Costly and inefficient regulatory policy is clearly impeding the ability of builders to increase the housing supply (according to a new NAHB study). …The latest HMI survey also revealed that 35% of builders cut prices in June, up from 32% in May. …The HMI index gauging current sales conditions fell two points to 38 in June, the index measuring future sales held steady at 45 and the index charting traffic of prospective buyers remained unchanged at 25.

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Texas A&M Forest Service launches Wood Flow South website

Texas A&M Forest Service
June 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

Texas A&M Forest Service recently launched Wood Flow South, an interactive website that provides insights into the volume, value and trends of the global forest products trade across the timber supply chain. “Wood Flow South tracks forest product flows and visualizes the ‘what, where and when’ of timber imports and exports,” said Dr. Xufang Zhang, Texas A&M Forest Service forest resource analyst. The tool provides estimates of the volume and value of forest products trade with foreign countries across Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida and South Carolina. Data can be filtered for each state by import/export, country, year, commodity and sub-commodities and presented in map or graph view. …“The application also integrates annual trade reports to provide comprehensive and detailed state-level trade information.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The Carbon Math Most Steel Building Lifecycle Comparisons Get Wrong

Green Building Canada
June 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Steel keeps losing the green building conversation on a technicality. Most lifecycle comparisons published in industry media compare materials on cradle-to-gate embodied carbon and walk away. Steel comes out heavy. Wood comes out light. Concrete sits somewhere in the middle. The reader files steel away as the carbon-heavy choice and moves on. The problem with that framing is not the numbers themselves. It is what gets left out of the calculation. A building exists for decades. Materials behave differently across that span. End-of-life recycling rates vary by an order of magnitude. None of that shows up in the cradle-to-gate snapshot that gets quoted in most green building pieces. …What the analysis does argue is that the cradle-to-gate number cited in most green building media tells less than half the story. …The broader lesson is that sustainable construction decisions should be based on whole-building lifecycle assessment rather than a single embodied-carbon number. 

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California launches Mass Timber Coalition

By Board of Forestry and Fire Protection
State of California
June 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

SACRAMENTO, California — The State of California announced the formation of the state’s first California Mass Timber Coalition, a new public-private partnership designed to accelerate the adoption of mass timber construction, drive forest health and wildfire mitigation efforts, and accelerate economic development across the state’s rural and urban communities. The Coalition brings together state and federal agencies, county and local governments, research institutions, industry representatives, forest sector organizations, non-profit organizations, and community partners to support the establishment of an in-state mass timber industry. …The Coalition will also work to establish state policy and regulations that drive positive outcomes for both utilization and manufacturing of in-state mass timber, as well as industry development and market growth. …Terry O’Brien, Chair of the Board of Forestry and Fire Protection, said “This collaborative approach will help California leverage innovation, reduce wildfire risks, and support economic opportunities for communities throughout the State.” Click here for more information.

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Builders look to five-day timber homes in bid to solve London’s housing crisis

The Standard
June 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Timber frame homes built in as little as five days could be a way to increase the pace of housebuilding in London, some of the capital’s largest construction companies have heard. Industry leaders travelled to Scotland to learn how the housing is produced, from sustainable forestry through to completed homes, as developers and ministers look for ways to increase the number of homes in the city. Scotland has adopted timber frame construction on a greater scale than England. About 92% of new homes north of the border are built using timber frame, compared with 13% in England. Andrew Orriss, of the Structural Timber Association, said: “Scotland builds faster, greener, and more efficiently than England. …“And the reason is timber frame. …Mayor of London Sir Sadiq Khan has a target to build 88,000 new homes per year. …In Britain, structural timber are only permitted to a maximum height of 18 metres, or up to 6 storeys.

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Forestry

From the Spring 2026 Woodland Almanac

Woodlots BC
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Woodlots BC is focused on practical action amid industry uncertainty
Executive Director Gord Chipman reports Woodlots BC is concentrating on issues it can influence, including signage, no-net-loss policies, private/agricultural land issues, and the woodlot levy. At the same time, he expresses concern about policy uncertainty, government delays, DRIPA-related issues, tenure transfer backlogs, and broader challenges facing BC’s forest sector. Read the Almanac for these stories and more.

  • Nearly $1.5 million in forestry and wildfire projects are planned
    Forest Investment Program projects and Wildfire Risk Reduction planned in 6 woodlots.
  • A new forest insurance opportunity
    The Canadian Forest Owners Association is spearheading a program to provide coverage for wildfire and insect damage on woodlots. 
  • Public access to woodlot roads remains a complex issue
    The use of gates on woodlot roads and public access.
  • Woodlot program leaders recognized
    Mark Clark and Tom Bradley named the 2026 Foundational Woodlotters.
  • Save the date
    The 2026 Woodlots BC Conference and AGM will be held October 1–3 at Tigh-Na-Mara Seaside Resort in Parksville, BC. 

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Forestry consortium, First Nation family heading to listening circle amid more possible Ontario court action

By Gabrielle Huston
CBC News
June 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

A forestry group that was granted an interlocutory injunction halting a blockade by a family from Matachewan First Nation (MFN) so it could complete tree-harvesting work in northern Ontario will sit down in a listening circle with them later this month in a case that may see further court action. The Timiskaming Forest Alliance Inc. (TFAI) is a consortium of forestry companies and First Nations, including MFN. It has a licence from Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) to harvest 101 hectares, referred to as Cairo 173… The family involved includes Dorothy Larkman, who said she decided to take action after seeing machines tearing out blueberry bushes on Cairo 173, which is about 60 kilometres west of Kirkland Lake and south of the Ojibway First Nation. …Listening circles are rooted in Indigenous traditions. …Michael Swinwood, Larkman’s lawyer, said the MNR will also have representation at the listening circle. 

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New Research Indicates That in the Future, Trees May Store Less Carbon Than Expected

Columbia Climate School
June 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A photosynthesizing tree is not necessarily growing — a new study of oak trees, published in the journal Science Advances, found that even as they photosynthesize late into the year, their growth stops by mid-summer. Much of the long-term carbon storage that forests provide depends on trees converting the carbon they absorb through photosynthesis into new wood. Many researchers have predicted that rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels will enhance photosynthesis and stimulate tree growth, putting some of that planet-warming carbon into long-term storage inside wood. However, the observed decoupling of photosynthesis from growth suggests that increased carbon uptake does not necessarily translate into greater wood production. Instead, some of the absorbed carbon may be used to produce foliage or used in short-lived metabolic processes rather than being locked away long term, reducing the amount of carbon stored in forests compared with previous expectations.

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To save Oregon’s forests, market our worst wood

By Naresh Khanal, forestry researcher
The Bend Bulletin
June 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

…Decades of fire suppression have left many dry pine forests overcrowded with small trees and dense brush. …Foresters largely agree on the solution: restore forests through thinning and prescribed fire. The problem is that restoration work is expensive, especially when it involves removing small-diameter trees that have little commercial value. …Taxpayers shoulder most of the burden while hazardous fuels continue accumulating across millions of acres. …Oregon is well positioned to tackle this problem. New wood products such as mass timber can create markets for the very material that restoration projects remove. Instead of treating small trees as waste, we can turn them into building materials… The goal is to keep large fire-resistant trees while removing smaller fuels that make forests more vulnerable to extreme fires. …Oregon already has the tools and workforce to address this problem. The question is whether we are willing to act before the next historic fire season arrives.

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Brewing battle over Forest Service glyphosate spraying near Lake Tahoe’s pristine waters

By Cary Gillam
The New Lede
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The US government plans to spray multiple types of herbicides – including the cancer-linked glyphosate weed killer – within national forest property that abuts the community’s cherished lake. …Katherine Levy is among a number of Lake Tahoe-area residents and officials who are fighting to block or alter the US Forest Service project, which is aimed at restoration of areas damaged by the 2021 Caldor Fire. The wildfire burned through more than 200,000 acres in and around the Lake Tahoe Basin. The Forest Service manages more than 156,000 acres of National Forest land within that basin. …The brewing battle is only one of similar fights over forestry pesticide use playing out across the US, but the Lake Tahoe issue has drawn the attention of leaders with the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement, who have been lobbying the US Environmental Protection Agency to ban or severely restrict glyphosate use.

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Oregon chainsaw competition creates buzz for timber industry

By Joni Auden Land
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

©SICC

Just behind a car dealership in Sandy, Oregon, the roar of chainsaws became almost deafening, as the smell of sawdust hung in the air. Seventeen artists gathered last weekend for the fourth annual Sandy Invitational Chainsaw Competition, carving a variety of complex designs — Sasquatches, roses, frogs and more — using powerful and dangerous tools. It’s all part of a local effort to spur interest in the timber industry. Industry leaders at the event say they struggle to hire enough workers, and they hope this art will be a gateway for a person’s career around trees. Competition founder Austin Ernesti is the executive director of Trajectory, a Sandy-based organization that promotes timber careers and sustainable forest practices. His nonprofit organizes field trips for students to attend. He conceived of the chainsaw competition to put a spotlight on Sandy, a city founded in large part by the timber industry.

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Biologists use cutting-edge tech to help save Oregon’s threatened species

By Kristian Foden-Vencil
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…After decades of biologists going out into the woods and physically counting animals, the agency is now turning to sound recorders and AI because they’re cheaper and can gather a lot more information. “Autonomous recording units with rechargeable batteries, memory cards, and the software costs are coming in the $600-$700 range per device,” said Oregon Department of Forestry biologist Corey Grinnell. The agency is currently spending millions to send biologists into the forests to conduct callback surveys, where they mimic a bird call and count responses. …The agency now has 23 devices and plans to deploy more as it moves away from callback surveys. …There is some concern that using recorders might put biologists out of work. But lead ODF biologist Vanessa Petro isn’t so sure. She said that once the AI counts birds in a recording, the tally will need to be checked by an actual biologist.

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Forest Stewardship Council wants to reduce worker risks in erodible, ‘non-certified’ forests

By Monique Steele
Radio New Zealand (RNZ)
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — One of the world’s largest certifiers of responsible forests is cracking down on risky work in erosion-prone forests, which could affect smaller plantation growers. The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) was working to reduce health and safety risks in forests that were not certified under its programme, but supplied what was known as “controlled” wood into mixed class products. The Germany-based organisation’s strict certification aimed to prevent illegal harvesting, human rights violations, to reject the use of genetically-modified organisms and protect conservation values. …FSC Australia and New Zealand senior policy manager Stefan Jensen said it was proposing significant due diligence changes in New Zealand, especially in steep and erosion-prone areas. He said the current risk assessment included one specified risk that was relatively easy for companies to meet, but more were being proposed.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says El Niño expected to grow to ‘historic strength’

By Tiffany Crawford
Vancouver Sun
June 13, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Here’s the latest news concerning climate change and biodiversity loss in B.C. and around the world, from the steps leaders are taking to address the problems, to all the up-to-date science. Human activities like burning fossil fuels and farming livestock are the main drivers of climate change, according to the UN’s intergovernmental panel on climate change. The panel, which is made up of scientists from around the world, including researchers from B.C., has … issued a code red for humanity and warns the window to limit warming to 1.5 C above pre-industrial times is closing. …El Niño — a climate cycle that causes unusually warm ocean surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific, altering global weather patterns — has begun and is expected to grow to historical strength, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said this week. …Human activities pushed global warming to 1.37 C above pre-industrial times in 2025, and its level is projected to surpass 1.5 C in about four years…

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Health & Safety

Searsmont fire official dies weeks after Robbins Lumber mill fire, explosion

By Asher Klein
NBC Boston
June 14, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

SEARSMONT, Maine — Another person injured in the lumber mill fire and explosion in Searsmont, Maine, last month has died, officials said Sunday. Wayne Woodbury, 76, died Sunday morning at Maine Medical Center, the Office of State Fire Marshal announced. He’d been part of the response to a May 15 fire at Robbins Lumber that led to a silo explosion. Another firefighter died, and a dozen people were hospitalized. Woodbury was the town’s assistant fire chief. Chief James Ames was injured and later released. …Investigators have determined that the fire was accidental, but the investigation is ongoing. The fire and explosion caused a massive blaze that brought in firefighters from around the region. …The firefighter who previously died was identified as 27-year-old Andrew Cross, of the Morrill Fire Department.

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