Daily News for May 05, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

Thank you for visiting the Tree Frog Forestry News

The Tree Frog Forestry News
May 5, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

Hello early bird! We just want you to know that the news team is busy adding stories to this page. Be sure to check back at 9:00 am (PST) for the full line up of articles.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

Five Things We Learned About Wildfire — and What Federal Leaders Must Do Next

By Kate Lindsay, Senior Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer
Forest Products Association of Canada
May 1, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Canada’s wildfire seasons are no longer episodic shocks. They are systemic and growing more costly with every passing year. Leading wildfire experts who are changing how we think about wildfire science, Indigenous fire stewardship, forest management, and emergency preparedness clearly underscored that new reality during a recent FPAC policy webinar.

What stood out from this event was the degree of alignment around one central truth: Canada already has strong provincial wildfire systems. The federal role is not to replicate them, but to enable them to work better, faster, and at scale. Five key lessons from the event point to a clear conclusion: policy must evolve from reacting to wildfire disasters to building long-term wildfire resilience.

  1. Wildfire is a national resilience issue
  2. Suppression-first approaches have created today’s wildfire risk
  3. Prevention and mitigation deliver strong economic returns—but only if scaled
  4. Indigenous fire stewardship is essential to effective wildfire management
  5. Canada has the tools to act—the cap is the implementation

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Accelerating Wildfire Resilience in Canada Through Collaboration

Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada
May 5, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Introducing the Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada (WRCC): Throughout Canada, people are doing inspiring work to improve our wildfire resilience – from FireSmart™ in communities, to efforts on the fire line, to stewardship of lands, to research across sectors, diverse groups of people are pitching in. You might be one of them! Though this inspiring work happens from coast-to-coast-to-coast, it can be challenging to know who is doing what, where it is happening, and how others can learn from it. The Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada (WRCC) is a national non-profit that was established in 2025 to help empower people to work together to transform wildfire resilience in Canada. Based on strong foundational work by wildfire leaders in Canada, the WRCC is specifically designed to support Indigenous fire stewardship, enhance knowledge exchange opportunities, and accelerate wildfire technology and innovation.

To make our work place-based, the WRCC is establishing seven regional networks in Canada, each convened by a Regional Coordinator. In 2026, the Regional Coordinators will launch webpages to highlight regional success stories and share upcoming events. Visit our website to learn who your Regional Coordinator is, find updates on these offerings, and reach out to help direct our work.

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Knowing the Fuel: How Modern Mapping Technology is Reshaping Community Wildfire Resilience in Canada

Forsite
May 5, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

In much of Canada, provincial and territorial fuel classification layers are built on vegetation inventory information that can be many years out of date. The inputs behind those layers are often unvalidated and the conditions they describe may not reflect current reality. …Forests change considerably over time. As an example, past harvest activity has restructured stands, and bark beetle infestations have converted millions of hectares of mature lodgepole pine into standing dead fuel. …Provincial layers typically describe fuel type classifications but say little about the structural attributes of those fuels, and nothing about their current seasonal condition. …In the WUI, the difference between a fuel-free buffer and a continuous shrub corridor can be measured in meters. Legacy maps cannot resolve these issues. The consequences of missing them are not abstract.

Forsite’s Fuel ID tool was built to address these gaps. Fuel ID encompasses a series of machine-learning approaches that use satellite imagery and, where available, LiDAR data to generate current, validated fuel information across the full canopy-to-surface profile. It is not a single product — it is a flexible system that generates resolution-appropriate outputs depending on available data inputs and the operational question being asked. 

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

Falling consumer confidence and a softer housing outlook signal weaker lumber demand, but tight supply should keep prices firm

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
May 4, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Kevin Mason

As the US–Iran conflict rumbles into a third month and the global economy faces myriad challenges (rising energy prices, slowing growth, swelling inflation, geopolitical fragmentation, etc.), it comes as little surprise that US consumer sentiment is also in freefall. The latest University of Michigan survey showed consumer sentiment plummeting toward record-low levels in April: down 3.5 points to 49.8. …Closer to our forest products universe, the National Association of Homebuilders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), a metric that tracks homebuilder confidence in the single-family housing market, declined by 4 points to a reading of just 34 in April. Builder confidence had shown signs of recovery through the second half of 2025; however, with this latest sharp decline, the index is nudging back toward record lows. 

…Based on the resilience shown in the US housing market last month, we are maintaining our full year 2026 U.S. housing start forecast of 1.325MM units. With our revised forecast for 2026 and given expectations for lumber demand from R&R to be flat (at best) this year, we now anticipate that overall North American lumber demand will decline by 350MMbf y/y in 2026 (we had previously forecast flat demand versus 2025). However, despite this deterioration, we believe North American markets will remain well balanced, and that overall lumber prices will stay quite strong this year relative to historical averages given declining supply in several regions (note that profitability for Canadian mills will be challenged by ongoing, elevated duties and tariffs).

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Business & Politics

B.C. premier pushes back after softwood lumber left off list for tariff relief

By Emily Fagan
CBC News
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ottawa’s decision not to include softwood lumber among the industries that will benefit from $1 billion in tariff relief funding sparked frustration from BC Premier David Eby, who said softwood lumber in the province has been “decimated” by U.S. tariffs. “I don’t know what it’s going to take, really, to get the bureaucrats and the ministers in Ottawa to recognize that softwood lumber employs more people in Canada than steel and auto parts combined,” Eby said. …”I really feel like BC’s projects are not getting the attention they deserve.” …Eby said he does not know why the industry would have been overlooked, though he hopes a separate funding announcement just for softwood lumber is in the works. …Jeff Bromley, wood council chair with the United Steelworkers, said 150,000 workers across Canada make their living off forestry. “I wish they would have included a broader program that would have helped our forestry industry,” he said.

 

 

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Finance & Economics

Boise Cascade reports Q1, 2026 net income of $17.8 million

By Boise Cascade Company
Businesswire
May 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

BOISE, Idaho — Boise Cascade reported net income of $17.8 million on sales of $1.5 billion for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026, compared with net income of $40.3 million on sales of $1.5 billion for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025. …Building Materials Distribution (BMD) sales decreased $18.2 million, or 1%, to $1,388.9 million, from $1,407.1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025. The decrease in sales was driven by net sales price decreases of 3%, offset partially by net sales volume increases of 2%. BMD segment income decreased $15.5 million to $32.9 million, from $48.4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025. …Wood Products’ sales, including sales to BMD, decreased $17.6 million, or 4%, to $398.2 million for the three months ended March 31, 2026, from $415.8 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025. Wood Products’ segment income decreased $9.2 million to $8.5 million, from $17.7 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Strength in Numbers: The Value of Wood Pellet Association of Canada Membership

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
May 4, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Canada’s wood pellet sector is recognized around the world for its quality, sustainability and reliability. This position is no accident. It is supported by coordinated industry efforts through the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC), the sector’s national voice. We are a member‑driven organization and the unified voice of Canada’s world‑leading pellet industry. We represent more than 50 producers and industry participants from coast to coast. Our role is to support the competitiveness of Canadian pellets, advance safety leadership and build long‑term market confidence—work that no single company can do as effectively on its own. At a time of evolving global markets, tightening sustainability requirements and growing scrutiny of bioenergy, working together matters more than ever. Becoming a WPAC member is about contributing to our shared strength, credibility and long‑term resilience as a sector.

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