Daily News for March 20, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

Gorman secures Okanagan tenure in rare bright spot for BC forestry

The Tree Frog Forestry News
March 20, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The Government of BC approved a tenure transfer from Weyerhaeuser to Gorman Group—marking a rare bright spot for BC forestry. In related news: BC First Nations gain control of three Clayoquot Sound forest areas; a COFI’s 2026 panel will tackle fibre access and competitiveness; Trump’s logging push faces new forest challenges in Oregon; a Swedish study says managed forests store less carbon; smokeless fuels may be bad for your health; and the winner-and-loser species from the 2021 heat wave. 

In other news: Kruger’s hydrogen plan for Kamloops may not be more efficient; LEGO employs mass timber for its office building; and Domtar touts its status as the world’s largest holder of both FSC and SFI management certificates. Meanwhile: perspectives on the Canada-US-Mexico trade negotiations; California recycling labeling law is being challenged; and the paper industry says it’s ready for ‘Made in Europe‘ recycling policy.

Finally, Canada and allies signal willingness to participate in US effort to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Joint statement from Canada, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Japan on the Strait of Hormuz

Prime Minister’s Office
The Government of Canada
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

OTTAWA — We condemn in the strongest terms recent attacks by Iran on unarmed commercial vessels in the Gulf, attacks on civilian infrastructure including oil and gas installations, and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces. We express our deep concern about the escalating conflict. We call on Iran to cease immediately its threats, laying of mines, drone and missile attacks and other attempts to block the Strait to commercial shipping, and to comply with UN Security Council Resolution 2817. Freedom of navigation is a fundamental principle of international law, including under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. …We emphasise that such interference with international shipping and the disruption of global energy supply chains constitute a threat to international peace and security. …We express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait. 

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Is Canada’s trade fate a three-sided circle?

By Stuart Culbertson, former BC deputy minister
The Vancouver Sun
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

In a world of colourful economic pie charts and slick bar graphs, the image of a three-sided circle is both awkward and uncomfortable. Yet this image may depict the emerging fate of the Canada-US-Mexico Trade Agreement. For Canada, the wild ride through Trumpian trade policy has now entered a decisive phase. …Some rules of the road ahead are beginning to take shape. First there is a recognition and begrudging acceptance that there will be some tariffs where CUSMA had none. …Secondly, despite warm commitments to the trilateral CUSMA relationship, Canada and Mexico are engaged in separate bilateral discussions with the US. …Enter the three-sided circle. Here the current comprehensive trilateral agreement would evolve into three bilateral trade agreements bound by a core centre that holds common rules and undertakings. …In triaging the trade-wounded, no sector deserves a bigger fix than Canada’s softwood lumber industry. Its market access to the US has been battered by 40 years of aggressive protectionism.

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Princeton mill celebrates approval of tenure transfer to Gorman Group’s Similkameen Forest Products

By Brennan Phillips
The Mission Record
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Princeton’s mill celebrated not just new owners but a new name as well with the handover of forestry tenures from Weyerhaeuser to West Kelowna-based Gorman Bros on March 19. …The transfer of the timber tenures has happened quickly since being announced in September 2025, as far as tenure transfers go and especially with the new legislative requirements to consider public interest. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said “Here you have a company that is continuing to make investments in BC in a time where things are tough right now in forestry. …That speaks well to the future of forestry and gives me the hope and optimism.” …The Ministry of Forests received nearly 300 letters in support of the Gorman tenure transfer from individuals, businesses, First Nations, contractors, community forests and unions during the public input period. “This is a good step forward for a sustainable forestry sector,” Princeton Mayor Spencer Coyne said.

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West Kelowna-based Gorman Brothers gains tenure in Okanagan from Weyerhaeuser

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The final step in a $120-million investment into BC’s forestry sector by a West Kelowna family-owned forestry company has concluded, following the Minister of Forests’ official approval of a tenure transfer from Weyerhaeuser to Gorman Group. “Gorman Group is investing in the future of forestry, investing in a new chapter for Princeton, and investing in the transformation of the community into a real forestry hub,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. …“By approving this tenure transfer, we are supporting a company that believes in value-added manufacturing, using every fibre to its fullest potential and keeping jobs here at home.” …The transferred tenures total approximately 682,000 cubic metres. …“We recognize that any Crown tenure transfer comes with important responsibilities and obligations to First Nations, communities and employees who depend on the long-term stewardship of the land and the careful use of the fibre,” said Nick Arkle, CEO, Gorman Group. 

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COFI 2026 Panel: Predictable and Economic Access to Wood

Council of Forest Industries
March 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Forester Panel to Tackle Fibre Access and Competitiveness at COFI 2026: A key session at the COFI 2026 Convention, The Forester Panel: Predictable and Economic Access to Wood, brings together leading practitioners for a practical, solutions-focused discussion on one of the sector’s most pressing challenges. Moderated by Michael Armstrong, SVP & Chief Forester with the Council of Forest Industries, the panel features Shannon Janzen (Hypha Consulting), Cheryl Hodder (Canfor), David Elstone (Spar Tree Group), Percy Guichon (Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation), and Christian Messier (Université du Québec en Outaouais / Habitat). Together, they will explore how to improve fibre access, streamline regulatory processes, maintain healthy ecosystems, and maximize the value of available timber. With B.C.’s forest sector facing ongoing uncertainty, this session focuses on actionable strategies to restore predictability, strengthen competitiveness, and unlock the province’s full forest potential. Register today!

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Finance & Economics

New Home Sales Decline in January on Weather Disruptions

By Jing Fu
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 19, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

New home sales declined in January, reflecting typical monthly volatility as well as weather-related disruptions. On a three-month moving average basis, sales remain broadly in line with a year ago, suggesting underlying demand conditions have been relatively stable despite the month-to-month fluctuations. Meanwhile, builders continue to rely on incentives to attract buyers and sustain demand. The January NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index showed that 64% of builders used sales incentives, marking the 12th consecutive month this share exceeded 60%. Sales of newly built single-family homes fell 17.6% in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 587,000 from a downwardly revised December reading. The pace of new home sales is down 11.3% from a year earlier. On a three-month moving average basis, sales were 688,000, remaining broadly in line with the 685,000 pace seen a year ago.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Industry coalition seeks injunction against California’s SB 343

By Stefanie Valentic
Resource Recycling
March 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

A cross-sector group of packaging producers, farmers, restaurants and grocers has filed a class action lawsuit seeking a preliminary injunction to block enforcement of SB 343, California’s controversial recycling labeling law. The coalition argues the legislation imposes unconstitutional restrictions on free speech, ultimately working against recycling participation programs by making it harder for consumers to understand what can and cannot go in the bin. At the heart of the complaint is SB 343’s prohibition on the use of widely recognized recycling symbols and claims, even when those claims are factually accurate, according to the suit. Under the law, producers cannot label packaging as recyclable unless it meets state-defined, “rigid” criteria that allegedly fails to reflect how recycling actually works. …“SB 343 establishes labeling standards that could discourage innovation and limit the ability to provide accurate recycling information to consumers,” the American Forest and Paper Association stated.

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LEGO adopts engineed mass timber for Virginia office building

Built Offsite
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

©LS3P

The LEGO Group has confirmed plans to construct an office building using engineered mass timber as part of its new manufacturing facility in Chesterfield County, Virginia, scheduled to open in 2027. …While the primary manufacturing buildings will rely on steel, concrete and glass …The office component will use engineered mass timber, with early project modelling indicating a reduction in embodied carbon of up to 40 per cent compared with conventional structural systems. The approach reflects a targeted substitution strategy, applying timber where it can materially reduce carbon intensity without affecting structural performance or delivery timelines. Designed by LS3P with Gray | Hourigan as general contractor, the building will draw on timber sourced from regions close to Virginia, including native species. This localised supply approach reduces transport inputs while aligning with regional forestry outputs. The link between LEGO’s product logic and the construction approach is hard to ignore.

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European Paper Industries says recycling sector ready for ‘Made in Europe’ policy

By Brian Taylor, Editor
Recycling Today
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The Brussels-based Confederation of European Paper Industries (CEPI) has released a statement indicating the forests and “state-of-the-art recycling system” of Europe stand ready to serve European Union policies supporting “Made in Europe” objectives. “A ‘Made in EU’ competitiveness model should be anchored in sustainably sourced biomass, high quality recycled materials and European technological leadership across these sectors,” states CEPI. The forest products and paper sectors can help Europe “build a more resilient, future proof growth model,” continues the group, that can be less reliant on coal, gas and other fossil fuels. Among resources the continent has in abundance, according to CEPI, are “sustainably managed forests, efficient recycling systems and the industrial know how that powers them. This pragmatic approach aligns industrial policy with Europe’s bio-based, circular strengths and advances some of the Clean Industrial Deal’s (CID’s) original ambitions.”

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Enzyme-mediated consolidation of lignocellulosic materials with a flame-retardant and fully recyclable mineral binder

By Ronny Kürsteiner, ETH Zurich
Chem Circularity
January 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The wood industry produces enormous quantities of lignocellulosic by-products, such as sawdust, and their incineration for energy recovery results in substantial carbon emissions and the loss of valuable raw materials. Here, we introduce struvite as a fully recyclable inorganic binder for the consolidation of sawdust into high-performance hybrid materials. The mineral binder is produced in situ by an enzymatically induced solution-mediated phase transformation driven by ureolytic protein bodies extracted from watermelon seeds. The resulting material exhibits excellent fire resistance with a long time to ignition (51 ± 1 s), low peak heat release (118 ± 2 kW m−2), and fast flame self-extinction due to efficient char-layer formation. Moreover, it displays high compressive strength (4.71 ± 0.37 MPa). Crucially for sustainability, the struvite binder can be recovered under mild aqueous conditions without loss of performance, offering a valid path toward a circular materials economy.

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Forestry

Certifications Endorse Our Responsible Forest Management and Fiber Sourcing Practices

By Colleen Marble
Domtar Corporation
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

At Domtar, environmental stewardship begins with responsible fiber procurement. This includes responsible forest management, careful tracking of wood fiber sources and a long‑running endorsement of third‑party certification. The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) and the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) are independent, globally recognized certification frameworks. They provide our customers with the assurance that we adhere to rigorous responsible forest management and chain of custody standards. Today, Domtar is the world’s largest holder of FSC and SFI Forest Management certificates, a testament to our commitment to responsible forest management, with nature, wildlife and local communities at the heart of our approach. …“Our stakeholders and partners across all sectors are rightfully focused on environmental impact,” says Luc Thériault, Wood Products CEO & President Canada. “Our environmental performance must be exemplary, which is why this pillar is fundamental to our 2030 strategy.”

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Sooke resident urges support from community to protect old growth forests

Victoria News
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Daria Mykhailovych, a Sooke resident, has been raising awareness across Greater Victoria about a petition calling on the provincial government to strengthen protections for British Columbia’s remaining old-growth forests in hopes of encouraging more people to support it. …Originally from Ukraine, she said landscapes like those on Vancouver Island are rare elsewhere in the world. …The petition was launched in fall 2025 by two B.C. forest ecologists, Dr. Suzanne Simard, a professor at University of British Columbia, and independent ecologist Dr. Rachel Holt. Originally, the petition was started with a goal of getting 10,000 signatures. As of March, 16, the petition has received support from about 4,070 people. …“Our concern is that we’ve been cutting these forests at an unsustainable rate,” Simard said. “We wanted to raise awareness and encourage people to question whether the path we’re on is good for the people of British Columbia and for the forests themselves.”

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Invasive Grasses May Be Turning B.C.’s Burn Scars Into the Next Wildfire

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A UBC FES study with St’át’imc Nation communities finds invasive grasses are the sleeper threat on B.C.’s post-fire landscape—and the window to stop them is narrow. After a wildfire, the flames may fade, but the danger does not. A new study by UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship researchers reveals that burned landscapes remain vulnerable for years, with large areas still bare and at risk of invasion by fast-growing, fire-prone grasses. The research, one of the largest vegetation trajectory studies in the world, monitored landscapes two years after major wildfires in interior B.C. While some native plants returned, recovery was slower and more fragile than expected. One of the most pressing concerns is invasive grasses, which germinate early in spring, dry out during the hottest months, and act as dry runways that spread flames at highway speed—a dynamic that contributed to the 2023 Lahaina fire in Maui and is increasingly likely in B.C.’s Interior.

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Vancouver Island First Nations gain control of three Clayoquot Sound forestry areas

By Brenna Owen
Canadian Press in the Victoria Times Colonist
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©TourismTofino

Tyson Atleo, a hereditary leader of the Ahousaht First Nation, says the creation of three new forestry areas to be managed by his community and two others on the west coast of Vancouver Island marks the realization of a long-standing promise. Atleo recalls assuring the community more than 15 years ago that “we would find a pathway forward to regaining control over some of our forest resources.” The vision is to manage the forests of Clayoquot Sound, a globally recognized biosphere that includes Tofino, B.C., in a way that reflects the nation’s interest in ecological integrity and balance it with access to economic opportunity, he said. The total combined area of the three new tree farm licenses is about 52,000 hectares, with Ahousaht set to manage about 33,000 hectares, Atleo said. The areas were previously part of a single, larger licence with harvesting rights belonging to forest company MaMook Natural Resources. 

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Amid Trump logging push, will Oregon enter new timber era?

By Zack Urness
The Statesman Journal
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

In Oregon… fights over how much to cut defined the 1980s and ’90s. Steep declines in timber harvest, meant to save Oregon’s last ancient forests, ripped an urban-rural divide that still festers. Today, Oregon still produces the most softwood lumber in the US. But the state’s timber harvest has hovered near historic lows, at least seven mills have closed since 2024 and logging on federal lands has been limited. President Trump’s administration wants to change that. …The moves have been met with cautious optimism in Oregon’s timber industry. …Environmental and outdoors groups, meanwhile, are gearing up to fight. …Battles between timber and environmental groups are quieter now than during the pitched height of the Forest Wars, but they never went away. A lot else has changed, however. Wildfires have become the state’s biggest issue, there have been historic agreements between the two sides and there’s a new industry, mass timber.

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‘Hybrid organ’: how a union of trees and fungi could revolutionise forest management

By Ben Martynoga
The Guardian
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

At a commercial tree nursery near Evans, western Louisiana, pine seedlings are sprayed with a liquid extract teeming with hundreds of species of wild soil fungi. Brad Ouseman, the nursery manager, is confident he will see results from this fungal inoculation, which is intended to improve yields and reduce the need for artificial fertilisers. Colin Averill, the founder of Funga, the startup company that supplied the spray, likens the treatment to a faecal microbiome transplant for young pine trees. Funga treats young pine trees with wild microbes derived from the soils of thriving pine forests. “We’re taking the whole soil community,” Averill says. “As a result, we get all the complexity and all the interactions that come with it.” The goal: trees that grow fast, drawing down more carbon dioxide, with less reliance on artificial fertilisers. …“Our next big target is Douglas fir in the Pacific north-west,” says Averill.

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A ‘shocking’ carbon discovery in Sweden’s forests

By Josie Garthwaite
Stanford School of Sustainability
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The boreal forest belt stretching across Scandinavia, Russia, Alaska, and Canada ranks among Earth’s largest carbon repositories. A first-of-its-kind study in Sweden finds wood harvesting and forest management are depleting carbon storage in these northern woodlands more than previously understood. Researchers found undisturbed primary forests store 83% more carbon per acre than the managed forests that are replacing them, with soil accounting for most of the difference. The world’s northern forests act as massive carbon vaults, locking away greenhouse gases in spruce, pines, and needle-covered soils. But industrial logging is quickly eroding their ability to mitigate climate change, according to a major new study led by scientists at Lund University and Stanford University. The biggest losses are happening in soils beneath the forest floor. …Major questions remain, including how much specific forest management practices may contribute to carbon storage capacity. Drainage ditches, plowing.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Hydrogen at the pulp mill will not make it more efficient

By David Charbonneau
Armchair Mayor
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Owner of Kamloops pulp mill, Kruger, is partnering with two others to reduce greenhouse gasses by generating hydrogen on site and using it as fuel. It’s an interesting pilot project but it won’t increase efficiency or significantly reduce greenhouse gasses. Others are the project developer, Elemental Clean Fuels; and Sc.wén̓wen Economic Development, the economic arm of Tk̓emlúps te Secwépemc. Zachary Steele, chief executive of New York-based Elemental Clean Fuels, says: “We believe our approach, which has received years of thought, is the right solution in terms of safety and economics and operational capabilities to decarbonize our process.” The Economic Development arm of Kamloops Indian Band is equally enthused. …The $ 21.7- million project is seeking financing from Natural Resources Canada. …However, 7,000 tonnes is a small amount of the CO₂ produced by the mill, mostly by the lime kiln. 

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Extreme heat has extreme effects–but some like it hot

By Alex Walls
UBC News
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

A sweeping new study of the 2021 heat wave reveals major ecological losses—but also surprising species that thrived, offering crucial insight into how climate extremes reshape ecosystems. …Some species did just fine during the 2021 North American heat wave, according to a new study published today in Nature Ecology and Evolution. With such events projected to become more frequent and intense due to climate change—and 2026 on track to be the hottest year ever—understanding these differing effects is vitally important, the researchers say. “The heat wave had widespread ecological effects, including an almost 400-per-cent increase in wildfire activity and negatively affecting more than three-quarters of the species studied,” said co-author Dr. Diane Srivastava, professor in the UBC department of zoology and Biodiversity Research Centre. …The researchers also found that cooler, wetter areas of the province were able to absorb 30% more carbon than usual, while warmer, more arid areas absorbed 75% less than usual. 

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Lawmakers’ wood pellet wishes clash with their anti-carbon storage proposals

By Elise Plunk
Lousiana Illuminator
March 20, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

LOUISIANA — Legislation to expand wood pellet manufacturing in Louisiana is gaining traction despite concerns over the industry’s connection to underground carbon storage, which has attracted a growing number of critics among state lawmakers. Louisiana is a burgeoning producer of wood pellets, which have been branded as a sustainable alternative to coal for generating electricity in overseas markets. As of 2023, mills in the South produced about 85% of the America’s wood pellet exports, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Reps. Chuck Owen, R-Rosepine, and Rodney Schamerhorn, R-Hornbeck, are carrying the proposed Louisiana Wood Pellet Manufacturing Strengthening Act. It directs the Louisiana Economic Development agency to promote the expansion of the industry throughout the state. …Legislators who have become hostile to carbon dioxide sequestration projects in their local districts openly disagree with economic development officials on whether the wood pellet industry even needs to store the CO2 they generate.

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Woodland Biomass draws closer to construction

By Natalie Kennedy
Wellsboro Gazette
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

Wellsboro, Pennsylvania — Woodland Biomass Innovations has completed the second of a four-stage process to convert low-grade wood products to fuel. Luca Pandolfi, founder and CEO of Woodland BIO, said a third party engineering firm validated the design of the system to convert wood biomass into fuel that is chemically identical to gasoline and that the plan is economically viable. “We’ve been busy. We hit some big milestones here so it’s exciting to have five years of work coming to fruition,” Pandolfi said. Completed in collaboration with TRC Companies, the study confirms the viability of converting 1,000 tons per day of regional wood residues into 42,000 gallons per day of 87-octane road-spec drop-in gasoline.

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The EU court supports the green finance designation for biomass energy investments

EMP Energy Market Price
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The EU’s General Court has rejected a legal challenge aimed at reversing the European Commission’s decision to categorize forest biomass energy as a sustainable investment within the bloc’s green finance framework. The court’s decision, issued on 18 March 2026 dismissed an attempt to annul a Commission ruling from July 2022, which had turned down a request for an internal review of Delegated Regulation (EU) 2021/2139. This regulation set the technical criteria for determining which forestry management and bioenergy practices can be regarded as environmentally sustainable. The plaintiffs, including Robin Wood and six other environmental NGOs, contended that the Commission’s designation of forestry and forest bioenergy as sustainable was illegal and violated EU legislation, particularly the Taxonomy Regulation. These rulings affirm that the Commission possesses significant discretion in establishing and implementing the taxonomy’s technical criteria, allowing politically sensitive sectors like bioenergy.

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Health & Safety

Mother of mechanic killed on the job calls for change as charges are laid

By Wallis Sharpe
CBC News
March 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ryan Sharpe

Two years after an Edmonton man sustained fatal injuries while on shift at a northern Alberta pulp mill, workplace safety charges have been laid in his death. Ryan Sharpe, a heavy duty mechanic, died March 13, 2024, while servicing a wheel loader at the pulp mill in Slave Lake, about 450 kilometres north of Edmonton. The 30-year-old was positioned underneath the Caterpillar heavy construction machine, which was elevated on wooden blocks, when it unexpectedly shifted. He died of his injuries. Provincial safety investigators announced charges in his death earlier this month, alleging the companies involved in Sharpe’s work at the pulp mill failed to ensure his safety. Pacesetter Equipment and West Fraser Mills operating as Slave Lake Pulp are facing a total of five counts under the Occupational Health and Safety Act.  Sharpe’s mother, Terri-Lynn Sharpe, said, “I’m still trying to process the charges but hoping that they make a difference.”

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‘Smokeless’ fuels produce more ultrafine particles that get embedded in lungs, study shows

By Gary Fuller
The Guardian
March 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

New research has found that burning “smokeless” or low-smoke fuels may be causing new air pollution hazards on streets and in homes. Sold as alternatives to burning coal, wood and peat at home, tests reveal their smoke contains large quantities of tiny ultrafine particles, that can deposit themselves deep in our lungs. The findings were an accidental discovery while researchers were testing fuels in traditional and modern eco design stoves. As expected, burning alternative fuels, both smokeless coal ovoids and briquettes made from olive stones, produced less particle pollution compared with wood or coal. …For each kilogram burned, the low-smoke fuels produced between two and three times more ultrafine particles than wood or coal. …The size of the ultrafine particles means that they are deposited deep in the lungs, multiplying the health impact. In Dublin, the low smoke fuels accounted for more than half of ultrafine particles that can deposit in people’s lungs. 

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Forest Fires

Louisiana remains ‘tinderbox’ for wildfires after Winn fire contained

By Greg Hilburn
Shreveport Times
March 19, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US East

A wildfire that destroyed about 1,500 acres of mostly timberland in Winn Parish was contained Thursday morning, but Louisiana Agriculture and Forestry Commissioner Mike Strain said the state remains “an absolute tinderbox.” Strain said his forest firefighters and personnel from other local and state agencies battled the Winn Parish fire until 10 p.m. March 18. He said the Winn fire bordered Louisiana 34 and primarily damaged timberland owned by Weyerhaeuser. “The high winds caused the fire to keep jumping our fire lines,” Strain said. He said investigators believe the fire was started from sparks from a blown tire on an 18-wheeler. The Winn fire follows recent large wildfires in Livingston Parish and St. Tammany Parish, which caused Interstate 12 to be temporarily closed. Strain said there already have been 350 wildfires in 2026. There are an average of 752 fires for an entire year in Louisiana.

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