Daily News for January 22, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

US sets preliminary duties on hardwood and decorative plywood

The Tree Frog Forestry News
January 22, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The US Department of Commerce set preliminary duties on hardwood and decorative plywood imports from China, Vietnam and Indonesia. In related news: a Dovetail study says US hardwoods are legally sourced and responsibly managed. In other Business news: Thunder Bay Pulp & Paper will cease newsprint production; Ontario invests $1M in Kirkland Lake Forest Products; Hinton Lumber Products expands pallet production in South Carolina; and BC Premier Eby says market reforms will help forestry but results will take time.

In other news: Michael Boren is sworn in as Undersecretary overseeing the US Forest Service; the University of Oregon has another podcast on the future of mass timber; and FSC is approved for use in Hungary. Meanwhile: the Winter issue of WorkSafeBC Magazine; a big turnout at the BC Natural Resources Forum; the Southern Forest Products Association released its 2025 value report; CMHC reveals which cities are leading Canada housing starts; and RISI releases outlook for European lumber prices.

Finally, South Florida looks to invest in biochar production from wood waste.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Business & Politics

Some investors considering taking over Crofton mill site

By Robert Barron
Nanaimo Bulletin
January 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

It appears that some investors have been kicking the tires at the soon to be closed Crofton pulp mill. A statement from the Municipality of North Cowichan said Mayor Rob Douglas and senior staff have recently met with several investors interested in potentially acquiring the Crofton mill site for continued forestry-related operations, or alternative industrial uses. “The municipality is facilitating connections between interested parties, Domtar (the mill’s owner), and the provincial government where appropriate, and remains hopeful that any future use of the site will generate employment opportunities and a stable tax base for the community,” the statement said. …North Cowichan provided no further information on who is interested in taking over the mill site.

Read More

Forestry leaders warn Eby reforms moving too slowly to save mills

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
January 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

Premier David Eby began his address to the Natural Resources Forum in Prince George Tuesday night describing the “hardest challenge and where I think we have the most work ahead”: the province’s beleaguered forestry sector. Eby said he’s still trying to bring about stability to an industry rocked by American softwood lumber tariffs, admitting “there are no quick fixes” to the dozens of mill closures, curtailments and layoffs occurring under his government. …“It always feels too slow for the urgency of the threat. But predictable land access, permit reform, value-added investments and new trading relationships will deliver a better forestry future.” …If he’d gone to the Truck Loggers Association convention, he would have once again been reminded from those working in forestry that it is the NDP government’s own policies on old growth, climate, reconciliation and permitting that have created the crisis the industry faces, with American tariffs just adding to the damage.

Related coverage:

Read More

Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper Announces Increased Focus on Softwood Kraft Pulp Operations in 2026 and Beyond

By Thunder Bay Pulp & Paper
Cision Newswire
January 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

THUNDER BAY, ON – Citing a uniquely large decline in demand for newsprint over the past several years, Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper announced today that it will file notices with the Ontario Ministry of Labour to cease newsprint operations in Thunder Bay in Q1 2026. This decision was made only after significant efforts to reposition the company within the evolving and rapidly declining newsprint market were fully explored. The impacts of declining market demand were further compounded by significant increases in input costs. Up to 150 people will be directly impacted by the closure. The company is working closely with the local unions and all levels of government to ensure affected employees have access to employment transition supports, retraining programs, and other necessary resources. …Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper will continue to operate as a single-line Softwood Kraft mill and generate renewable energy for sale to the grid…

Read More

Kirkland Lake Forest Products gets $1 million in funding

The Kirkland Lake Northern News
January 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

ONTARIO — The provincial government is investing $1 million to help Kirkland Lake Forest Products grow its business. The funds are being made available through the Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation (NOHFC) to help the company install advanced manufacturing equipment at its Kenogami mill. As part of the government’s plan to protect Ontario and strengthen the province’s forestry sector, this investment will help Kirkland Lake Forest Products improve operations and boost competitiveness in the global market, according to a press release issued Jan. 21. “At a time when U.S. tariffs are putting a strain on northern industries, our government is using the NOHFC to make strategic investments that support our forestry sector,” said Northern Economic Development and Growth Minister George Pirie. …Kirkland Lake Forest Products is a softwood lumber finger-joint mill that produces a range of high-quality products.

Read More

Trump pick for top forest post arrives after long delay

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
January 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Michael Boren

Michael Boren, the Idaho multimillionaire rancher President Trump picked to oversee the Forest Service a year ago, stepped into that role Tuesday after a long temporary assignment at the Interior Department. Sworn in by Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, Boren is now undersecretary of Agriculture for natural resources and environment, a position that looks solely over national forests. Boren’s arrival at USDA was delayed repeatedly — first, by the wait to be confirmed by the Senate and then due to a stint at Interior as acting assistant secretary, a job now held by Troy Finnegan. His shuffle between the agencies in some ways reflects the administration’s direction on forest policy, which seeks to merge much of what the two agencies do. The administration is seeking to move wildfire management from the Forest Service to the Interior Department, and Mike Lee (R-Utah) has proposed moving the entire forest agency to Interior. [to access the full story an E&E News subscription is required]

Read More

Commerce Department Issues Affirmative Preliminary Countervailing Duty Determinations on Hardwood and Decorative Plywood from China, Indonesia, and Vietnam

Wiley.law
January 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, DC – On January 16, 2026, the U.S. Department of Commerce released its preliminary affirmative countervailing duty findings on hardwood and decorative plywood, identifying significant subsidies provided by the governments of China, Indonesia, and Vietnam. Commerce calculated preliminary countervailing duty rates of 81.34% on imports from China, 2.40% to 128.66% on imports from Indonesia, and 4.37% to 26.75% on imports from Vietnam. The Coalition for Fair Trade in Hardwood Plywood… commends Commerce for its decision to impose these preliminary duties to remedy the unfair trade practices of China, Indonesia, and Vietnam. “The domestic hardwood and decorative plywood industry has been harmed for decades by unfairly traded imports from China, Indonesia, and Vietnam,” said Timothy C. Brightbill, lead counsel to the Coalition and co-chair of Wiley’s International Trade Practice. …Commerce’s countervailing duty investigations will continue over the coming months, with the agency further investigating subsidies—including newly alleged subsidy programs—received by the Chinese, Indonesian, and Vietnamese industries.

Read More

Hinton Lumber Products Expands National Pallet Supply Network

By Hinton Lumber Products
Cision Newswire
January 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

SUMMERVILLE, South Carolina — Hinton Lumber Products, a national supplier and producer of block pallets, has officially opened a new greenfield pallet manufacturing facility in Summerville, South Carolina, part of the greater Charleston region. Pallet production at the facility is slated to begin in spring 2025. …”This facility is an important milestone in our growth strategy,” said Larry Howell, President of Hinton Lumber Products. …Charleston was chosen because it has direct access to important interstates. It also has one of the best ports on the East Coast, the Port of Charleston. The facility is optimized for high-throughput pallet production, including ISPM 15-compliant wood pallets and EU-spec designs required for international shipping.

Read More

Southern Forest Pine Association releases 2025 Value Report

Southern Forest Products Association
January 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

The Southern Forest Products Association (SFPA) released its 2025 SFPA Value Report, underscoring a fundamental truth about the Southern Pine lumber industry: its strength is rooted in collaboration and the power of partnership. More than a retrospective, the 2025 Value Report captures the collective impact of SFPA’s diverse and engaged membership working toward a shared goal of advancing the Southern Pine lumber industry. From sawmills producing high-quality Southern Pine lumber, to exporters expanding access to global markets, machinery and equipment manufacturers driving operational efficiency, and service providers supporting every link in the value chain, SFPA members continue to move the industry forward together. “The strength of the Southern Pine lumber industry continues to come from the collaboration and leadership of our members,” said Eric Gee, SFPA’s executive director. 

Read More

Finance & Economics

CMHC reveals which cities are leading, lagging on housing starts

By Rod Bolivar
CMHC in Wealth Professional
January 19, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s six largest CMAs recorded a 3.9% rise in housing starts in 2025, driven by a 58% jump in Montréal and record starts in Calgary and Edmonton, while Toronto fell 31% and Vancouver slipped 3%, CMHC said. CMHC said the metro gains helped lift the national annual total for all areas in Canada to 259,028 housing starts in 2025, up 5.6% from 245,367 in 2024 and ranking as the fifth highest annual total on record. …The year-over-year increase was driven by a second consecutive year of record rental housing starts, which made up just over half of all housing starts in Canada’s urban centres, CMHC said. …Among Canada’s three largest cities, CMHC said all posted year-over-year increases in December. Toronto recorded a 151% increase, driven by higher multi-unit starts. Montréal posted a 123% increase, driven by higher starts across all dwelling types. Vancouver reported a +17% increase, also driven by multi-unit starts.

Read More

Concessions could help Canada keep lower tariffs in trade deal review: strategist

By Daniel Johnson
The Canadian Press in the Times Colonist
January 21, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

TORONTO — The review of North America’s free trade agreement will play a large part in determining the trajectory of the Canadian economy, as one strategist says he is optimistic that certain concessions could help achieve a positive outcome. Ashish Dewan, a senior investment strategist at Vanguard, said the Canadian economy is still significantly reliant on US trade despite attempts to diversify its trading partners. He said Canada currently has a “trade advantage,” due to a lower effective tariff rate compared with other nations, sitting around six per cent compared with about 16 to 19 per cent faced by other nations. “What’s really having a negative impact on the Canadian economy are those Section 232 sectoral tariffs,” Dewan said. Tariffs covered by Section 232 of the U.S. Trade Expansion Act of 1962 cover a wide range of products like steel, aluminum and lumber and are generally not exempt under the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement, better known as CUSMA.

Read More

European sawn timber market trends and outlook

By Tuomo Neuvonen
RISI Fastmarkets
January 21, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

European sawn timber markets closed 2025 in a holding pattern, with Nordic exporters navigating persistent structural headwinds amid minimal price movement and cautious buyer sentiment. The December assessment period captured a market characterized by stability rather than recovery. Prices were largely flat across Germany, France, the Benelux region and the United Kingdom, reflecting subdued construction demand, elevated sawlog costs in key producing regions and strategic inventory management by producers and buyers. Even as some specialized sectors showed tentative signs of firming, particularly in engineered wood applications, the broader Nordic export market entered 2026 facing continued pressure from weak end-user activity, ongoing industrial restructuring and lingering macroeconomic uncertainty across the continent. …North American market dynamics: North American softwood sawn timber markets entered 2026 against a backdrop of profound structural challenges and unprecedented trade policy pressures. The most significant development remained the escalation of combined countervailing and anti-dumping duties on Canadian lumber.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Kelowna International Airport gets new, modern departures lounge

By Ty Lim
The Kelowna Capital News
January 21, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©naturally:wood

Kelowna International Airport (YLW) is finishing major upgrades… The expansion adds 5,590 square metres of new space to the terminal building and is part of the Airport Terminal Building Expansion project. …Incorporated into the terminal’s architecture is mass timber that was supported by a $500,000 grant from the B.C. Mass Timber Demonstration program. The process utilized local companies in Kelowna, Castlegar and Vancouver. …“Through our Look West plan, our goal is to expand B.C. manufacturing and triple the amount of B.C. wood used in construction in the next 10 years. The Kelowna International Airport expansion exemplifies the economic impacts we can create by using locally sourced, value-added mass timber construction,” said Ravi Kahlon, minister of jobs and economic growth. B.C. Parliamentary Secretary for Trade Paul Choi said, “mass timber is the future of construction, as we know it’s cost efficient, low emission and creates good jobs right here in B.C.,” he said.

Read More

American Hardwood Assured Jurisdictional Risk Assessments for 37 U.S. States

Dovetail Partners
January 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

The American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC) commissioned Dovetail Partners to complete independent jurisdictional risk assessments covering hardwood production in U.S. states identified as significant producers of hardwoods. These assessments were prepared in conformance with the AHA “Framework for Jurisdictional Risk Assessment of Legal Compliance of Hardwood Production in the USA.” The jurisdictional risk assessments (JRAs) examined the risk of illegality associated with hardwood production at the state level and are intended to support due diligence under emerging regulations, including the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). Each assessment evaluated the strength and effectiveness of forest governance systems, including laws, enforcement, monitoring, reporting, and legal recourse, to determine the level of compliance established across indicators in the AHA framework. The overall finding of the 37 jurisdictional risk assessments is that there is a negligible risk for all criteria and indicators across all of the States assessed.

Read More

The Future of Mass Timber: Innovation, Policy, and Global Leadership [Podcast]

By Judith Sheine, TallWood Design Institute
University of Oregon
January 21, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

On this episode of This is Oregon Podcast, we’re joined by Judith Sheine, Professor of Architecture and Director of Design of the TallWood Design Institute at the University of Oregon. She shares her work with helping mass timber become more accessible and discusses it potential to create affordable, sustainable housing. Sheine also discusses the challenges and opportunities in advancing mass timber development and what its future could look like for the Pacific Northwest and homeowners. This is part two of our conversation with Judith Sheine. Part one is titled: Mass Timber 101: Exploring the sustainability of Oregon’s next-generation wood innovation.

Read More

Forestry

‘What lies behind the trees’: Okanagan Forest Task Force documentary debuts Wednesday

By Cindy White
Castanet Kelowna
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

With the 10th anniversary of the Okanagan Forest Task Force approaching, this volunteer-run backcountry clean up team will be featured in a documentary that makes its debut on YouTube Wednesday evening. The documentary was produced by Eli Coburn of Coburn Media. “Our hope in doing this is just to shed light on what is actually happening in the backcountry. Like I say in the documentary, a lot of people sit in an office and they look outside and see the beautiful hills around us, and don’t realize what’s actually going on,” said OFTF founder Kane Blake. “Whether it’s encampments, illegal dumping, all kinds of stuff, you know. And it’s disheartening and disgusting. “A lot of this pollution ends up in our waterways, our drinking water. It’s affecting people and wildlife.” Over the years, partners have come on board to help OFTF deal with the tons of debris found in our forests. 

Read More

Growing native plants to heal land at Indigenous owned nursery in British Columbia

By Ruth Kamnitzer
Mongabay
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

CRANBROOK, British Colombia — At the Nupqu Native Plant Nursery in the Canadian province of British Columbia, sulfur buckwheat seedlings fill Styrofoam trays. …Sulfur buckwheat (Eriogonum umbellatum) is a high-altitude grassland species and one of the most in-demand species for restoration of highly degraded land, says Melanie Redman, the nursery’s seed specialist. But it’s also notoriously tricky to propagate. …Nupqu, which means “black bear” in the Ktunaxa language, is a wholly Ktunaxa-owned land and natural resource management company, part of a number of businesses jointly owned by the four Ktunaxa First Nations in Canada and the Ktunaxa Nation Council. Five years ago, the company acquired an existing native plant nursery, located on the ʔaq̓am reserve, and has since been building up expertise and capacity. The Nupqu Native Plant Nursery, which says it’s the largest Indigenous-owned native plant nursery in Canada, now cultivates more than 60 plant species. 

Read More

Biggest turnout in more than two decades for BC Natural Resources Forum

By Matthew Hillier
The Prince George Citizen
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Prince George Civic Centre was packed to the brim as 1,600 members of the natural resources industry met. This makes the 2026 forum the most well-attended in the more than two decades. …The first day of the forum kicked off with workshops on renewable energy, navigating benefit-sharing agreements in BC and proven communication strategies. Booths were also set up, ranging from industry giants like CN Rail and the BC Council of Forest Industries to newcomers like Tano T’enneh Enterprises, the economic and business development arm of the Lheidli T’enneh First Nation. …Another company taking part is Strategic Natural Resource Group, the largest Indigenous majority-owned resource consulting firm in Western Canada. …The company has also helped develop Prince George’s wildfire resilience plan and has helped contractors and city staff implement a plan to maintain a FireSmart ring around the city, said CEO Domenico Lannidinardo.

 

Read More

Huge year for Tree Canada – more coming in 2026

By Don Cameron
Truro Daily News
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

…Tree Canada is all about planting trees. It has been around since 1992, working to grow Canada’s tree canopy through its greening programs, research, and engagement efforts. Tree Canada prides itself as being the only national non-profit Canadian organization that funds tree planting events in both urban and rural communities. Tree Canada (TC) has just completed its most successful year to-date and is gearing up for an even bigger year ahead of planting trees across the country. There has been rapid growth in the TC programs over the last five years having grown from 522,000 trees planted in 2020-21 to 2.3 million in 2025, and forecasting 3.75 million trees in 2026. …The total TC budget of $22 million comes from three approximately equal one third sources – Federal two billion trees program, Corporations/organization, and donations from Individuals.

Read More

A new alliance to secure the future of forests and ensure they thrive

By Marc Benioff, Alexa Firmenich and Chavalit Frederick Tsao
The World Economic Forum
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A perfect storm has hit Earth’s forests. Home to 80% of terrestrial biodiversity, our forest landscapes are straining under a new normal of +1.5 °C temperatures. Forests are increasingly vulnerable to disease, fire, floods, thaw and pollution – affecting communities, countries and our collective future prosperity. Forest investors are navigating new levels of complexity from the degradation of carbon sinks, carbon market failures, artificial intelligence-led disinformation, constrained funding and continued deforestation. We are witnessing wildfire superseding agriculture as the leading cause of tropical deforestation. Today in Davos, we launch the Forest Future Alliance (FFA). Housed within the World Economic Forum, the FFA supports private sector and philanthropy investors on their journey navigating complexity and in support of responsible conservation, restoration and stewardship of forests – the lungs and heart of our planet.

Read More

From pilot to practice: FSC Interim Forest Stewardship Standard approved for Hungary

Forest Stewardship Council
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Hungary’s forests, covering over one-fifth of the country’s land area, play a vital role in biodiversity conservation, helping communities adapt to climate change, and supporting rural livelihoods. While forest cover has increased over recent decades and further expansion is planned through national afforestation efforts, achieving long-term sustainability depends on the consistent application of responsible forest management across different types of forest ownership. The approval of the FSC Interim Forest Stewardship Standard (IFSS) for Hungary (FSC-STD-HUN-01-2025 EN) provides a single, nationally applicable framework that reflects FSC’s updated international sustainability requirements, helping forest managers move from sustainability commitments to actions they can apply and track. The new IFSS strengthens forest protection in Hungary by reinforcing current actions to care for natural areas, including restrictions on large-scale tree cutting, and by reinforcing requirements for identifying and managing High Conservation Values (such as biodiversity, ecosystem services, or local communities).

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Burning trees to help the planet? South Florida tries new climate tech solution

By Ashley Miznazi and Michelle Marchante
The Miami Herald
January 21, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

In lush South Florida, trees and bushes grow all year round. And that means yard waste and dead trees never stop piling up. But leaving them in a landfill is a climate-warming issue. Two South Florida governments think they have a new solution — light it on fire, but in a planet-friendly way. Miami-Dade County and Coral Gables are both turning to new technology that leans on ancient farming practices to transform wood waste into a charcoal-like material called biochar. The material known as “black carbon” has the potential to clean dirty water, nourish soil and even be used in roads. Plus, it has lower emissions than a simple bonfire, leading to cleaner, healthier air that contributes less to climate change. …Gables leaders are getting ready to drop millions to create a facility that will use large, futuristic ovens to bake fallen trees and other vegetative waste into biochar.

Read More

Health & Safety

Winter issue of WorkSafe Magazine

WorkSafeBC
January 22, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The Winter 2025 issue of WorkSafe Magazine is now available, featuring practical guidance and real-world examples to help employers and workers build safer, healthier workplaces. Learn how retailers are preventing common musculoskeletal injuries (MSIs) through smarter layouts, ergonomic tools, and proactive training. Go behind the scenes of WorkSafeBC’s Student Safety Video Contest and discover what makes a safety message resonate. Get expert tips on assessing and supporting crane operators to improve safety, skills. See how early communication and collaborative return-to-work planning help injured workers recover while staying connected to the workplace. And don’t miss the Western Conference on Safety 2025 — Vancouver, April 20 & 21

Read More