Daily News for February 02, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

JD Irving proposes lands swap to help New Brunswick meet its conservation goals

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

JD Irving proposed a lands swap to help New Brunswick meet its conservation goals. In related news: a new study on Boreal tree planting and carbon neutrality in Canada; carbon credits could help Georgia’s forest industry; BC First Nations acquire some of Canfor’s timber rights; BC Timber Sales grapple with watershed logging in West Kootenay; Ontario invests in natural resources research; IKEA completes forest land acquisition; and Vietnam focuses on sustainable timber sourcing. Meanwhile: the latest news from the BC First Nations Forestry Council.

In Business news: Ontario helps Kap Paper complete its market-pivot study; Oregon counties get pay bump from logging; CN Rail reports tariff hit and forest products revenue drop; and Canada’s Real GDP was unchanged in November. Meanwhile: Unifor Canada toutes forestry for sustainable jobs action; and mass timber news from Cleveland, Ohio, and Redmond, Oregon.

Finally, On World Wetlands Day—a focus on forest conservation and climate resilience.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Lakes District and Bulkley Valley First Nations acquire more timber rights

Terrace Standard
January 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

More of the B.C. Central Interior’s timber rights are back in First Nations hands. The Ministry of Forests sat down at the BC Natural Resources Forum in Prince George to transfer about one million cubic metres of the Morice Timber Supply Area (TSA) to a coalition including the Witset, Wet’suwet’en, and Lake Babine Nations. …During the signing ceremony, where nine of the region’s chiefs put their names on the dotted line, Lake Babine Nation leader Wilf Adam pointed out that the coalition had gone first to Canfor with a “fair market value” offer to buy it, but the company refused and closed communications. Adam added that the spinoff effect was a stalled and unstable local economy in the Burns Lake-Granisle-Houston-Smithers-Witset region.

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Unifor Submission to the 2026-2030 Sustainable Jobs Action Plan Consultations

Unifor Canada
February 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The unravelling of our trade relationship with the US compels us to act decisively. The chaotic diplomacy of the Trump Administration should encourage Canada to build up economic capacity where Canadians possess both agency and an existing industrial base to rely upon. This capacity‑building goal dovetails with the inherent purpose of the Sustainable Jobs Action Plan (SJAP). …Acting on these priorities, industry can direct its capital and follow its own strategic objectives, but it will do so in an environment that better reflects Canada’s long‑term economic goals. The SJAP can play a pivotal role. …One can look to the forestry sector. …Forestry faces an existential crisis from the 45% U.S. duties and tariffs imposed on Canadian lumber. …However, the sector also holds immense potential for manufacturing a variety of high value‑added products while also being a renewable resource key to decarbonizing construction.

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Canada announces funding to support for Kap Paper in Northeast Ontario

By Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
Cision Newswire
January 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO – The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Industry and Minister responsible for Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions, announced that the Government of Canada is investing $7.5 million through the Strategic Response Fund (SRF) to help Kap Paper complete a Front End Engineering Design (FEED) study to support a pivot in its operations toward growth markets. The study will establish the key execution criteria necessary for a final investment decision on creating a new medium-density fibreboard (MDF) facility. This facility would keep Kap Paper operational, safeguard employment in Kapuskasing, Ontario, and strengthen the regional economy. …”This investment will help the company define its plan to manufacture higher-value products to diversify revenue streams, stabilize demand for fibre and maximize the economic output of harvested timber, ” said Joly.

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Oregon counties get pay bump from federal logging

By Justin Higginbottom
Oregon Public Broadcasting
January 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The federal government is increasing the amount of logging revenue shared with some Oregon counties due to changes in the 2026 Department of the Interior appropriation bill. Oregon Counties will now receive 75% of the revenue from timber harvests on federally managed O&C Lands within their borders, compared with the previous 50% split. …“The passing of the bill represents one of the most, if not THE most significant achievements and highest priorities for O&C Counties in the last 44 years,” the Association of O&C Counties said in a statement. …“We are in desperate straits, and we have nowhere to cut,” Coos County Commissioner Rod Taylor said. “Last year, we had to cut a position from our clerk. We had to cut a position from our land surveyor. We had to close half of the jail.” …Logging revenue has declined amid increased conservation efforts and regulations.

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Finance & Economics

Tariffs take $350M bite out of CN Rail revenues, with uncertainty now ‘biggest risk’

By Christopher Reynolds
The Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
January 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

MONTREAL — Tariffs and economic angst delivered a significant blow to Canadian National Railway Co. last year, as the question mark hanging over North American free trade continues to threaten profits in 2026. “Tariffs, trade uncertainty and volatility impacted our full-year 2025 revenues by over $350 million,” chief commercial officer Janet Drysdale told analysts on a conference call Friday. Forest products and metals took the biggest bruising, she said, with the two segments seeing a year-over-year revenue drop of eight and four per cent, respectively, in the latest quarter. …On top of trade uncertainty, a less publicized source of angst has rippled through the rail industry since last summer. Union Pacific Corp., the second-largest railway operator in the United States, announced in July it wants to buy Norfolk Southern Corp. in a US$85-billion deal that would create that country’s first transcontinental railway, and potentially trigger a final wave of rail mergers across North America.

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Canada’s Real GDP Was Unchanged In November

Statistics Canada
January 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Real gross domestic product (GDP) was essentially unchanged in November, following a 0.3% decline in October, as contractions in goods-producing industries offset expansions in services-producing industries. Goods-producing industries declined 0.3% in November, down for the third time in four months, driven by contractions in the manufacturing and agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting sectors in the month. …The manufacturing sector fell 1.3% in November, with decreases in both durable-goods and non-durable-goods manufacturing industries. …The agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting sector declined 1.1% in November, following a 0.6% decrease in October, as nearly all subsectors were down in November. …Forestry and logging (-2.8%) declined for the third straight month in November. This was the subsector’s largest contraction since May 2023, bringing activity to a record low level, as timber harvesting companies scaled back production in response to sawmill production cutbacks and weak lumber markets.

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Global Consulting Alliance: Forest Sector Outlook Report Q4, 2025

Russ Taylor Global
February 1, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

RUSS TAYLOR provided the latest quarterly report from the Global Consulting Alliance featuring commentary from six independent consulting companies that focus on the international forestry and wood products sectors. Highlights include:

  • The forest products sector exited 2025 fundamentally reshaped. Rather than a cyclical rebound, the year was characterized by structural adjustment, widening regional divergence, and a shift in strategic priorities.
  • Capacity expansion remained concentrated in Asia-Pacific and Latin America, while Europe and North America focused on rationalisation, consolidation, and selective reinvestment. Sustainability, traceability, and supply-chain transparency accelerated as core strategic imperatives.
  • Climate policy, carbon markets, and evolving sustainability and disclosure requirements are increasingly shaping forest investment decisions, land-use trade-offs, and fibre availability, reinforcing regional divergence and influencing long-term asset values.
  • As the industry enters 2026, forestry, pulp, and wood products producers are increasingly positioning around resilience, cost discipline, and regional strategy, rather than scale-driven growth, reflecting a slower global growth outlook, elevated costs, and a more fragmented trade environment.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

New Library’s Mass Timber Nods to Central Oregon’s Lumber Mill Heyday

By Narte Traylor
ARCHITECT Magazine
January 30, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Redmond, Oregon’s new library is bigger, clearer, and easier to use. In downtown Redmond, Deschutes Public Library’s two-story Redmond Library—designed by The Miller Hull Partnership with local firm Steele Associates—more than doubles the size of the former branch. The project’s mass timber structure is central to that approach. Exposed wood columns, beams, and ceilings give the interior a clear framework and a warm material baseline. In Central Oregon, the structure also serves as a visible reminder of the area’s economic history, when the logging and milling industries shaped towns across the region, including Redmond. …Program planning grew from extensive community engagement. …The result is a library that serves as a flexible piece of public infrastructure—one that uses mass timber as both structure and signal. 

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Ohio City Hotel Gets Financing Extension for Mass Timber Tower

Ken Prendergast
NEOtrans: Northeast Ohio Transportation / Transformation
January 30, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

CLEVELAND, Ohio — A state panel this week extended its offer to help finance construction of a new 129-room boutique hotel in Cleveland’s Ohio City neighborhood. While that doesn’t guarantee the hotel will move forward, the developer leading the project said construction can’t start without the state’s financing. The board… offered until Jan. 31, 2027 are $35 million worth of state bonds for the roughly $55 million project that would build a Marriott Tribute Portfolio boutique hotel. …The air quality facilities noted in the resolution include the seven-story building’s proposed use of mass-timber in its construction. …The presence of wood-timber construction above a first-floor reinforced concrete deck is noted in this axonometric view of the proposed Ohio City Hotel (DLR). The use of mass timber instead of reinforced concrete can save up to 40% in ongoing heating and cooling emissions for a building’s user as well as reduced emissions, according to Dan Whalen, at Places Development. 

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Forestry

World Wetlands Day: Conserving Canada’s boreal region supports communities, wildlife, and our climate

Ducks Unlimited Canada
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

STONEWALL, Manitoba — On World Wetlands Day, Ducks Unlimited Canada is challenging Canadians to take action to conserve our boreal region. …Spanning nearly 1.3 billion acres –about one-third of Canada’s landmass–the boreal forest and its wetlands form one of the planet’s largest intact ecosystems. When undisturbed, the boreal’s peatlands play a vital role mitigating floods, drought, and wildfire. It is estimated that one square metre of peatland in Canada’s boreal region stores about five times more carbon than one square metre of tropical Amazon rainforest. …Unfortunately, less than 15% of the region is under some form of conservation protection. These landscapes store enormous amounts of carbon and play a critical role in mitigating climate change. When wetlands are drained or degraded, those benefits are lost — and carbon is released back into the atmosphere. Watch Peatlands at Work to learn more.

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West Kootenay community, B.C. Timber Sales grapple with risks of logging in watershed

By Bill Metcalfe
The Rossland News
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents of a Bonnington, 18 km west of Nelson, hope they can rely on B.C. Timber Sales’ assurances that logging in their watershed will reduce wildfire risk and won’t threaten their water supply. For nearly a year, BCTS has engaged in an elaborate communication process with the residents of Bonnington about its plans for the Falls Creek watershed. The agency has a timber license on Crown land in the watershed, which provides drinking water to the rural community of about 600 people. …BCTS plans and designs logging operations, builds logging roads, then sells the timber to the highest bidder. The B.C. government added wildfire mitigation to the BCTS mandate last year. In the spring of 2025, the province hired Cathy Scott-May, a communications consultant, to steer a communication process along with BCTS professional forester Mark Tallman of Nelson. …Tallman said this consultation process is different from anything BCTS has done in the past…

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BC First Nations Forestry Council January Newsletter

BC First Nations Forestry Council
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC First Nations Forestry Council has released its January 2026 newsletter, highlighting continued momentum toward stronger collaboration, relationship-building, and First Nations leadership in B.C.’s forest sector. The update reflects on recent engagement with Nations, government, and industry, and emphasizes the importance of moving from dialogue to on-the-ground action through forest landscape planning, shared decision-making, and DRIPA-informed processes. A major focus of the newsletter is a preview of the 2026 BC First Nations Forestry Conference, which will bring together First Nations, industry partners, and government for three days of discussion, learning, and networking. The conference program will feature a First Nations caucus, workshops, panel discussions, youth engagement, and expanded networking opportunities. Readers will also find early details on registration, sponsorship, and event planning. The full newsletter offers useful insight into current priorities and upcoming opportunities shaping Indigenous leadership in forestry across the province.

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Native plant seeds from critically endangered Garry Oak ecosystems to be preserved

By Hope Lompe
Vancouver Sun
January 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands are home to some of the critically endangered Garry oak ecosystems. Only five per cent remains today after much has been lost to land development. These ecosystems continue to face threats including climate change, wildfires, invasive species and urban development. Now, a novel B.C. rare and culturally significant seed bank will try to preserve seeds from native plant species, with the goal of repopulating critical ecosystems in the event of disaster. The plan to collect and preserve the seeds involves the Nupqu Native Plant Nursery, the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship, University of British Columbia botanical gardens, and the Coastal Douglas fir Conservation Partnership, administered by the B.C. Conservation Foundation.” …The team has already begun the specialized process of seed collecting in Garry oak ecosystems, and collected 12,000 seeds from seven species to date.

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Ontario Investing More Than $235,000 in Research to Protect Natural Resources

By Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

TORONTO — The Ontario government is investing over $235,000 through Collaborative Research Agreements to support seven innovative research projects across the province that will help protect wildlife, improve fisheries management and strengthen the forestry sector, as part of the government’s plan to protect Ontario’s natural resources and communities. These new projects bring the government’s total investment in active Collaborative Research Agreement projects to more than $3 million as Ontario continues to take action to protect the lands, waters and wildlife families and industries depend on. “Through this investment, we are strengthening our plan to protect Ontario’s forests, waterways and wildlife,” said Mike Harris, Minister of Natural Resources. “These research projects will [support] good-paying jobs and build resilient communities across Ontario.” Funding will be provided over the next two to four years to five Ontario universities. 

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Protected lands on the chopping block under J.D. Irving’s proposed forest swap

By Silas Brown
CBC News
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — J.D. Irving approached a number of municipalities last fall, asking them to support its request to be able to log 32,000 hectares of protected areas on its Crown timber licence in exchange for conserving forest near those communities. At least nine municipalities signed a letter asking that Natural Resources Minister John Herron “give equal weight to the social and economic interests of local governments when seeking to balance the interests of multiple stakeholders across New Brunswick.” …Conservation groups, including the Conservation Council of New Brunswick, said the proposal is extremely concerning. Roberta Clowater questioned why protected areas would be treated as “a wood bank for industry.” …The proposal is in response to the government’s promise to increase conservation lands from 10% to 15% of the province’s landmass. That would mean protecting an additional 360,000 hectares, which the province hopes to source from a mixture of Crown and private land.

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World Wetlands Day 2026: Integrating Traditional Knowledge for Climate Resilience

By Reyyan Dogan
Arch Daily
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Observed annually on February 2, World Wetlands Day marks the adoption of the Ramsar Convention in 1971 and provides an international framework for recognizing the role of wetlands in environmental protection and sustainable development. The 2026 edition is held under the theme “Wetlands and traditional knowledge: Celebrating cultural heritage,” drawing attention to the long-standing relationships between wetland ecosystems and the cultural practices, knowledge systems, and governance structures developed by communities over centuries. The theme highlights how inherited ecological knowledge, often embedded in rituals, seasonal calendars, land-use practices, and spatial organization, has shaped resilient interactions between human settlements and water-based landscapes. …World Wetlands Day 2026 emphasizes the need to reconsider prevailing development models by integrating traditional knowledge with scientific research and planning strategies in efforts toward conservation, restoration, and long-term environmental stewardship.

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Sustainability key to repositioning Việt Nam’s wood industry in global supply chains

The Việt Nam News
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

HCM CITY — Proactive compliance with legal timber sourcing and sustainability standards is essential not only for business survival, but also for repositioning Việt Nam’s wood industry towards greater transparency, responsibility, and higher value creation in global supply chains, speakers said at a seminar in HCM City on January 29. Speaking at the Forest Talk & Link seminar themed “Wood Consumption, Climate Change and Deforestation-Free Requirements”, Võ Quang Hà, Chairman of the HCM City Structure Architecture Wood Association (SAWA), said Việt Nam exported more than US$17 billion worth of wood and wood products in 2025, ranking among the world’s leading furniture exporters. However, an estimated $4–5 billion in export revenue still derives from low-value wood chips and pellets, underscoring the sector’s significant untapped potential for value-added growth. Developing large-timber plantations was identified as a key solution.

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Ingka Investments completes forestland acquisition in the Baltics from Södra

Ingka Investments
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Ingka Investments, the investment arm of Ingka Group (IKEA’s largest retailer), has completed the acquisition of forestland from Södra in Latvia and Estonia, following the signing of the agreement announced in October 2025. The transaction is part of Ingka Investments’ strategy to invest in long‑term assets that combine financial resilience with positive impact for the Ingka Group and IKEA business, building a strong foundation for many generations to come. With the acquisition now completed, Ingka Investments will take on the role of long‑term forest owner, with the ambition to manage the forest in a responsible way, while contributing to local economic activity. …Total area included in the acquisition is 135,232 ha in Latvia, and 17,742 ha in Estonia. The purchase price of the asset was EUR 720 million. …With IKEA retail operations in 32 markets, Ingka Group is the largest IKEA retailer and represents 87% of IKEA retail sales.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Strategic tree planting could help Canada become carbon neutral by mid-century

By The University of Waterloo
Phys.Org
February 1, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

A new study finds that Canada could remove at least five times its annual carbon emissions with strategic planting of more than six million trees along the northern edge of the boreal forest. The paper, “Substantial carbon removal capacity of Taiga reforestation and afforestation at Canada’s boreal edge,” appears in Communications Earth & Environment. Researchers at the University of Waterloo factored in satellite data, fire probabilities, loss of vegetation, and climate variables to estimate how much carbon the forests would remove. They found that planting about 6.4 million hectares of trees in that region could remove roughly 3.9 gigatonnes of CO₂ by 2100. Scaling up to the most suitable areas increased the potential to around 19 gigatonnes. Reducing greenhouse gases is key to minimizing the worst effects of climate change. These results represent a significant step toward Canada’s goal of being carbon neutral by 2050 and meeting its commitments under the Paris Climate Agreement.

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Scientists hope carbon credits can help Georgia’s faltering forestry industry

By Emily Jones
WABE News Atlanta’s NPR Station
January 30, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

…Timber prices have been low for a long time; they never really recovered from the 2008 housing crash. Nearly a dozen paper mills closed across the South in recent years, and Hurricane Helene tore down trees in much of Georgia and the Carolinas. It’s left many in Georgia, one of the leading states for forestry, with a dilemma: what do you do when your income relies on a forest but nobody wants to buy your trees? A group of researchers and industry leaders thinks paying landowners for carbon storage could help. “We may see a decline in the number of acres that are kept in forests and the quality of the land that is forested,” said David Eady with Georgia Tech’s business school. Losing those trees would shrink the industry and be devastating for the environment. …So Eady and others asked: why not use that carbon storage to keep foresters in business?

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Irish factory hoping to turn wood dust into electricity

By Niall McCracken
The BBC
February 1, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

A door company in Ireland says it holds the key to turning wood dust into electricity to help power its factory. It’s part of a new multimillion-pound investment by O&S Doors. The company says the onsite renewable heat and energy technology is “a first on the island of Ireland”. Currently the company takes wood dust left over from the manufacturing process and ships it to England where it is used as animal bedding or sent to landfill. But the company – located just outside Benburb in County Tyrone – has revealed new details of its plans to install a biomass-fuelled combined heat and power system. It will turn the dust into millions of units of electricity that can reused to power parts of the factory. …O&S Doors says its biomass-fuelled combined heat and power system will harness MDF dust.

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