Daily News for April 10, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

BC forest CEOs say fibre access, land certainty and regulatory reform are urgent — not optional

The Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

BC forestry CEOs say fibre access, land certainty and regulatory reform are urgent — not optional. Other COFI 2026 keynotes include:

In Business news: the new softwood lumber duty rates announced by Commerce are panned by Minister Parmar and BC’s Independent Wood Processors, but praised by the US Lumber Coalition. Meanwhile: Mercer’s debt challenges persist; Russian forest companies face bankruptcy; and US consumer prices surge, while US remodeling sentiment edges down.

In Forestry news: criminal contempt charges were approved for BC old-growth protesters; BC’s forests are being reviewed to death; Mississippi researchers enhance forestry decision-making software; Oregon NGOs hold public meetings on forest protections; US logging is said to be less harmful than you think; and more on the USFS research station closures ahead of an expected catastrophic wildfire season.

Finally, more coverage of yesterday at COFI here. Today’s presentations will be in Monday’s news. 

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

COFI 2026 Convention Opens with Call for Collective Action on Forestry’s Future

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

The 2026 BC Council of Forest Industries Convention opened Thursday morning at the JW Marriott Parq Vancouver with a welcome session that set a clear tone for the two days ahead — forestry as both an industry under pressure and a source of solutions to some of British Columbia’s most pressing challenges. The session was anchored by Greg Stewart, President of Sinclar Group Forest Products and Chair of the COFI Board of Directors, who noted the convention was sold out. Speakers also included a territorial welcome from Squamish Nation Forestry Specialist Brian George, a civic address from City of Vancouver Councillor Lisa Dominato, and opening remarks from Kim Haakstad, President and CEO of COFI.

…Stewart followed with his own remarks as COFI Board Chair, framing the sector’s history and its current stakes in direct terms. …He warned that losing or significantly reducing the forestry sector would remove benefits well beyond economics: community viability, the infrastructure needed to maintain forest health and mitigate wildfire risk, and the skilled workforce that underpins both. His call to delegates was explicit — to take the conference theme to heart, listen closely to each panel, and consider what each person could do within their own operations, with colleagues, and in their communities. Haakstad closed the welcome session by describing “Forestry is a Solution” not only as the conference theme but as a province-wide campaign involving more than a dozen organizations representing communities, workers, and the full forest value chain.

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Next Generation Panel Sees Opportunity Amid Complexity at COFI 2026

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

A panel of three emerging forestry leaders offered a ground-level perspective on the sector’s challenges and opportunities at the 2026 COFI Convention, in a session moderated by Natalie McGladrey, Strategic Business Advisor at Canfor. The panelists were Anna McNally, Manager of Cedar Sales at Western Forest Products; Georgina Clarke-Magnus, RPF and Planning Forester at A&A Trading Ltd.; and Mark Roller, RPF and General Manager of Woodlands at Sinclar Group Forest Products. Each described arriving in forestry by a non-linear path — Clarke-Magnus through urban roots and a pivot from psychology, Roller after a carpentry career in Alberta and a formative canoe trip with a forester father-in-law, and McNally after arriving from Ireland and taking a reception position at Western Forest Products that turned into a decade-long career. All three cited the people in the sector and the complexity of the work as what keeps them engaged.

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Mayors Panel Calls for Champions, Civic Engagement and a Return to Honest Dialogue on Forestry

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three BC mayors brought a community perspective to the 2026 COFI Convention in a panel moderated by Karen Brandt, Senior Vice President of Public Affairs and Partnerships at Mosaic Forest Management. The panelists were Leonard Krog, Mayor of Nanaimo; Brad West, Mayor of Port Coquitlam; and Maria McFadden, Mayor of Castlegar. The session ranged across polarization, public communications, civic engagement, land use, and what local governments need from the forestry sector to be effective advocates. Each mayor was asked to open with their biggest concern about the state of the sector and their hopes for it a decade out. West said his primary concern is that residents of Metro Vancouver are entirely unaware that mill closures have any material impact on their lives — that they do not connect the health care, education, and public services they rely on to the forestry workers who help fund them. Without that awareness, he said, the political conditions for meaningful action will not develop.

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BC Forest CEOs say Fibre Access, Land Certainty and Regulatory Reform Are Urgent — Not Optional

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Four of BC’s leading forest sector CEOs delivered a frank and at times sobering assessment of the industry’s current state at the 2026 COFI Convention, telling delegates that conditions are among the most difficult any of them have encountered in careers spanning more than three decades. The session, moderated by Bridgitte Anderson, President and CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, brought together Susan Yurkovich, President and CEO of Canfor; Sean McLaren, President and CEO of West Fraser; John Mohammed, President and Owner of A&A Trading Ltd.; and Steven Hofer, President and CEO of Western Forest Products. The panel was structured around questions, with the CEOs offering distinct perspectives shaped by their different roles across the sector’s value chain. …On current operating conditions, the panelists were unified in their assessment. Hofer said this is the most challenging business environment for a BC forest products company he has encountered in 33 years. …Yurkovich said BC used to be the last company standing in a downturn — with well-placed fibre, excellent sawmills, and skilled workers. That has changed. BC is now the first down.

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Public Opinion Researcher Bruce Anderson Sees Policy Window Opening for BC Forestry

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Bruce Anderson, Chief Strategy Officer and Partner at Spark Advocacy, delivered the luncheon keynote at the 2026 COFI Convention under the session title “View from Ottawa: Navigating the New North,” offering delegates a public opinion researcher’s read on the state of Canadian politics, the national mood, and what both mean for the forestry sector. The session was moderated by Zara Rabinovitch, Vice President of Sustainability and Public Affairs at COFI. Anderson, who has worked with the forestry sector since the mid-1990s and described the past year as the most significant period of change he has observed in four decades of public affairs work, organized his remarks around three themes: the shift in Canada’s political life, the mood of the public, and what he called the forest and the trees — his observations on where forestry sits in the current federal landscape. On federal politics, Anderson said Canadians have moved decisively away from performative politics toward a demand for serious leadership and serious solutions.

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Minister Parmar Outlines Working Forest Vision, Commits to Structural Shift as Sector Presses for Fibre Flow

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar used his address at the 2026 COFI Convention to lay out what he described as the key objectives that will define his work as minister over the coming months — anchored by a vision for a working forest that moves British Columbia away from the permit-by-permit, boom-and-bust model that has defined the sector for decades. The session, moderated by COFI President and CEO Kim Haakstad, also included Deputy Minister of Forests Makenzie Leine, who joined the stage for a question-and-answer period that drew heavily from audience submissions and covered tenure obligation costs, BCTS reform, DRIPA, and the immediate challenge of moving fibre. …Parmar said his job is to work with industry and all British Columbians to chart a path that delivers good-paying, family-supporting jobs, and that he is unapologetic about that work. He identified six key objectives that will guide his ministry: defending forestry jobs and the communities that depend on them; building a competitive value-added forest economy; creating healthier, more resilient forests to protect communities from wildfire; forging partnerships to compete in global markets; and protecting watersheds, biodiversity, and wildlife through responsible stewardship.

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Central 1 Chief Economist Sees Slowing Growth, Persistent Uncertainty Ahead for BC and Canada

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Bryan Yu, AVP and Chief Economist at Central 1 Credit Union, opened the 2026 COFI Convention’s macroeconomic outlook session by telling delegates that Canada and BC are navigating what he described as an era of poly-crises — with a Middle East conflict, ongoing trade pressures, and structural domestic weaknesses all converging simultaneously. His assessment was cautious across virtually every major indicator, with forestry among the sectors he identified as facing both immediate and longer-term headwinds. Yu said the Middle East conflict, now in its sixth week at the time of his address, had driven oil prices sharply higher reflecting the significance of the Strait of Hormuz as a chokepoint for roughly 20% of global oil supply. A ceasefire had briefly pushed prices down by approximately $20 in a single day, but Yu said the world is already in a different place than it was six weeks ago. Higher oil prices, he said, are here to stay in the near term and are inflationary, though he was clear this is not a hyperinflationary environment comparable to 2008-09 or the period following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

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Regional Chief Teegee Calls for Full DRIPA Implementation, Warns Against Negotiating Through Media

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Regional Chief Terry Teegee of the BC Assembly of First Nations used his opening keynote address at the 2026 COFI Convention to deliver a frank assessment of the current state of the relationship between First Nations and the provincial government — describing it as being at a very low point — and to issue a clear call for the full implementation of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, rejecting what he characterized as a proposal to suspend it in all but name. Teegee, who is serving his third term as Regional Chief and has been in the role for nine years, opened by acknowledging the broader economic context facing the sector. He cited 15,000 jobs lost in BC since 2022 and 21 permanent or indefinite mill closures since 2023, and noted that fibre supply constraints are reducing economic viability at the same time that regulatory complexity and costs are increasing. He said the current pressures are structural changes putting pressure on every part of the system, but that moments of pressure test whether governments stay grounded in sound policy and cohesive strategy. Challenges, he said, should not be used to justify decisions that create more instability in the long term.

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Federal Government Pledges Partnership in Forest Sector Transformation, Announces $4 Million for BC-Based Project

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Corey Hogan, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, delivered the federal government’s address at the 2026 COFI Convention Thursday morning, telling delegates that Canada’s forest sector stands at a genuine moment of transformation — and that the federal government intends to be an active partner in navigating it. Representing the riding of Calgary Confederation and serving on the House of Commons Standing Committee on Natural Resources, Hogan outlined more than $2 billion in federal measures announced since April 2025 and made a new $4 million funding announcement tied to a BC-based company. …NRCan’s Investments in Forest Industry Transformation, known as IFIT — Hogan announced $4 million for Atlas Engineered Products, a BC-based company building a new robotics-enabled wood components manufacturing facility in Clinton, Ontario. The facility is designed to improve precision, reduce material waste, and produce engineered structural components intended to accelerate housing construction timelines across Canada. Hogan described it as exactly the kind of project the government wants to see more of.

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Business & Politics

Continued Unfair Canadian Softwood Lumber Subsidies and Dumping Confirmed in Commerce Department’s Seventh Annual Review

The US Lumber Coalition
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Department of Commerce announced the preliminary determination of a combined anti-subsidy and anti-dumping duty rate of 24.83% in the seventh annual review of unfairly traded Canadian softwood lumber imports into the United States. The review covers lumber imported in calendar year 2024. “The Commerce Department findings confirm, yet again, that Canada continues to trade unfairly in softwood lumber,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director. “Time has come for Canada to stop subsidizing its lumber industry and instead reduce its massive excess lumber production to meet market realities.” “Canada consumes an estimated 7 billion board feet of lumber, but has the capacity to produce 27 billion board feet of lumber,” continued van Heyningen. “Canada dumps 90 percent of its excess lumber capacity into the U.S. market, directly displacing U.S. manufacturing and U.S. jobs.”

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U.S. reduces duty rates on Canadian softwood but levies still hefty

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The U.S. Department of Commerce plans to reduce duty rates for most Canadian softwood producers, but they would still need to pay hefty levies of 34.83%. US import taxes on softwood lumber currently total 45.16% on most Canadian producers, including combined countervailing and anti-dumping duties of 35.16% and tariffs of 10%. In its announcement on Thursday, the Commerce Department said it expects to decrease the anti-dumping duty rates to 10.66% from 20.53 %. Most Canadian producers also face paying 14.17% for countervailing duties, down slightly from 14.63%. The revised anti-dumping and countervailing duties equal 24.83%, and when combined with the tariffs, the levies total 34.83%. …Kurt Niquidet, of the BC Lumber Trade Council said, “These duties continue to make it more expensive to build homes at a time when both countries should be working together to improve housing affordability.” …New duty rates are intended to take effect by late summer of 2026, subject to further revisions in a final determination. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Mercer Bonds Sink as Pulp Firm Seeks to Strip Lender Protections

By Reshmi Basu
Bloomberg Markets
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

Mercer International’s bonds slumped after it sought to ditch rules requiring equal treatment for all creditors — a move that would give the struggling pulp producer the power to pick and choose which lenders to favor in a restructuring. The company asked owners of its bonds due in 2028 and 2029 to remove a provision that forces it to pay all lenders equally when it seeks to strike a debt deal, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified discussing private information. Separately, a group of Mercer’s creditors has organized in anticipation of debt talks with the company and plans to sign a cooperation pact binding them to act together. …Mercer is grappling with weak earnings and dwindling cash flow that’s left it struggling under the weight of its debt, which stood at about $1.6 billion at the end of last year. S&P Global Ratings downgraded the firm to CCC+ in February.

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B.C. forest industry opens convention still looking for action on streamlining permits

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Makenzie Leine, Ravi Parmar & Kim Haastad

BC Forest Minister Ravi Parmar arrived at the Council of Forest Industries’ annual convention in Vancouver holding out the promise that policy changes at government-run BC Timber Sales will free-up some new timber for an industry that can’t get enough of its raw material. For the industry, however, changes that Parmar heralded in Bill 14 won’t come quickly enough to help and don’t get at their core problem with a permitting process that takes companies years to navigate before receiving permission to harvest trees. “It’s now taking two to three years, in many cases, to get a forestry permit,” Council of Forest Industries CEO Kim Haakstad said. “But we’ve seen mines approved in 10 months.” Haakstad said: “We’d just love to see the same in forestry.” …“I think that unless we see some more urgent action from the provincial government, it’s likely that we’ll see more closures this year,” she added.

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B.C. forestry conference deals with Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act amid industry struggles

By Amy Judd & Paul Johnson
Global News
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Terry Teegee

[The Council of Forest Industries event] is underway in B.C. and perhaps, not surprisingly, Aboriginal title and the Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, or DRIPA, are top of mind for many. More than 600 industry, government and First Nations representatives are discussing the issues facing B.C.’s struggling forest industry. Terry Teegee, the Regional Chief of the B.C. Assembly of First Nations, gave the keynote speech at the conference. He once again offered reassurances that, while First Nations leaders reject any changes to DRIPA, this does not threaten private property. “Private property is private property,” Teegee said. “No First Nations want anything to do with private property. Rather, negotiations need to be had with this provincial government in regard to title. At the core of this commitment is free, prior, and informed consent. Teegee said that DRIPA should be fully implemented to allow for predictability and sustainability of forestry, mining and other resource industries.

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Minister’s statement about administrative review results on Canadian softwood lumber duty

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests, issued the following statement in response to the US Department of Commerce’s release of preliminary results of the seventh administrative review of its anti-dumping and countervailing duty orders on Canadian softwood lumber: “BC stands with all those across Canada in our disappointment that the US has signalled that it will continue to impose unwarranted and unfair duties on Canadian softwood lumber products. “These duties serve only to damage both of our economies by harming BC and Canadian communities, and increasing the cost of housing and renovations for American families.  “Duties on Canadian softwood lumber needlessly favour offshore imports that endanger North American jobs across the supply chain. Workers in BC, in Canada and in the US are worse off from duties on softwood lumber.

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Latest U.S. softwood ruling exposes broken trade process, underscores need for negotiated resolution

By Brian Menzies, executive director
Independent Wood Processors Association
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

North Vancouver – The Independent Wood Processors Association (IWPA) says today’s preliminary U.S. softwood lumber duty ruling under Administrative Review 7 (AR7) is further evidence that the softwood lumber dispute has become a broken process that continues to punish businesses and consumers on both sides of the border without bringing either side closer to resolution. The U.S. Department of Commerce has posted a preliminary tariff determination expected to be finalized in August. The preliminary combined duty rate includes a countervailing duty (CVD) of 14.17 per cent and an anti-dumping duty (AD) of 10.66 per cent, for a total combined rate of 24.83 per cent. The current duty rate of 35.16 per cent will remain in effect until a final determination is issued. …The Independent Wood Processors Association says the ongoing dispute continues to unfairly harm companies that should never have been included in the first place. … “This ongoing cycle is creating uncertainty for businesses, workers, and consumers across North America and highlights the urgent need for a negotiated solution,” said Andy Rielly, Chair of the IWPA.

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Half of Russia’s forest companies could face bankruptcy by end-2026

The Lesprom Network
April 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Russia’s forest industry warns that up to 50% of companies could shut by the end of 2026 as lower export prices, higher transport costs and a strong ruble push producers deeper into losses. Regional lawmakers and industry participants ask First Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov to approve a three-year moratorium on creditor-initiated bankruptcy cases in the sector, along with tax deferrals and a pause on debt collection for liabilities accumulated by January 1, 2026, Russian Kommersant newspaper reports, citing a committee of the Arkhangelsk regional assembly. The draft says even large companies in the region have exhausted their financial reserves, are operating at a loss and are starting to miss tax and other mandatory payments. It puts total sector losses over the past three years at more than 15 billion rubles. State support for exporters also drops sharply, with compensation for forest export costs falling from 7.6 billion rubles in 2023 to 550 million in 2026.

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Finance & Economics

Energy, mining exports lift B.C. trade in February

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
April 9, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

B.C. saw a significant increase in energy and mineral exports in February compared with a year earlier, while wood exports continued to decline. The province exported more than $4.8 billion worth of products in February, a 16.3 per cent monthly increase and a 2.8 per cent year-to-date increase compared with the same period last year. …However, exports in the wood sector continued to decline. About $479 million worth of products were exported in February, an 18.1 per cent decline from January. Lumber saw the sharpest drop, down 27.7 per cent, followed by other panel products (-23.4 per cent) and plywood and veneer (-19.1 per cent). As a result, year-to-date wood exports fell by more than 30 per cent compared with the same period in 2025. Machinery and equipment exports also declined, down 17.9 per cent month-over-month and 27.6 per cent year-to-date.

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US consumer prices surge in March in line with expectations

By Lucia Mutikani
Reuters
April 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — U.S. consumer prices increased by the most in nearly four years in ​March as the war with Iran boosted oil prices and the pass-through from tariffs persisted, further diminishing chances for an ‌interest rate cut this year. The Consumer Price Index jumped 0.9% last month, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Friday, the largest increase since June 2022, when prices soared in response to the Russia-Ukraine war. Consumer prices rose 0.3% in February. In the 12 months through March, the CPI advanced 3.3% after rising 2.4% in February. …The jump in consumer inflation followed in the ​wake of a sharp rebound in job growth last month, which suggested the labor market remained stable. There are, however, ⁠concerns that a prolonged conflict in the Middle East could undercut the labor market, especially if households respond to high prices by pulling ​back spending.

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US Remodeling Market Sentiment Edges Down but Remains Positive in First Quarter

By Eric Lynch
NAHB Eye on Housing
April 9, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

In the first quarter of 2026, the NAHB/Westlake Royal Remodeling Market Index (RMI) posted a reading of 62, down two points compared to the previous quarter. Despite this decline, the overall reading has been solidly in positive territory since Q1 2020. Remodeler sentiment remained generally positive in the first quarter, even as many remodelers are still working to manage their customers’ cost expectations. Only a relatively small share report homeowners putting projects on hold due to economic and political uncertainty. Ongoing positive remodeler sentiment is consistent with NAHB’s outlook, given an aging housing stock and the lock-in effect of elevated mortgage rates keeping owners in the homes longer. In the first quarter, remodelers reported 21% of their projects were associated with home improvements made shortly after a purchase, while only 4% were for homeowners’ projected to ready a home for sale. 

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US real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 0.5% in Q4, 2025

US Bureau of Economic Analysis
April 9, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2025 (October, November, and December), according to the third estimate released today by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the third quarter of 2025, real GDP increased 4.4%. The third report for the fourth quarter of 2025, originally scheduled for March 27, 2026, was rescheduled due to the October–November 2025 government shutdown. Real GDP was revised down 0.2 percentage point from the second estimate, primarily reflecting a downward revision to investment. For more information, refer to the “Technical Notes” below. The contributors to the increase in real GDP in the fourth quarter were increases in consumer spending and investment. These movements were partly offset by decreases in government spending and exports. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The skylines of the future will be made of wood

By Matt Simon
Grist
April 10, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Picture yourself in a wind-swept forest. Leaves are rustling and trunks are creaking as trees sway to and fro. This oscillation might seem precarious, but it’s actually an ancient adaptation: If pines and firs and all the others were perfectly stiff, a gust would snap them. So instead, they flex. …A tree’s clever evolutionary trick, you see, has made the modern metropolis possible: As towers reached higher and higher in the early 20th century, architects used not wood but steel to create giants that would similarly flex in hurricane-force winds and as earthquakes rattled their foundations. …To that end, last month crews completed a 10-story building in Vancouver, called the Hive, which is now North America’s tallest brace-framed, seismic-force-resisting (meaning it shrugs off earthquakes) timber structure.

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Forestry

BC’s forests are being reviewed to death

By Sarah Korpan, government relations, Ecojustice
National Observer
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If reviews could save old growth, British Columbia would have the healthiest forests on Earth. Instead, the province has produced a stack of reports as tall as an ancient Douglas fir. Their wording may differ, but their conclusion does not: BC’s forestry system is broken. Fixing it will not be easy or quick, but instead of acting, the government continues to produce new reports to delay tough decisions — especially when those decisions mean standing up to large logging companies that profit most from the status quo. Rather than using the reports to inspire action, the BC government is hiding behind them. …Nearly six years into BC’s OGSR commitment, we now have a sixth report by the Provincial Forest Advisory Council called From Conflict to Care. It again concluded that systemic reform is needed in the province’s forestry regime. Each report acknowledges the same truth: what we’re doing isn’t working.

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Province upset because feds aren’t classifying all Alberta Crown land as ‘protected’

By Zoe Mason
Medicine Hat News
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The government of Alberta is contesting new federal environmental strategy on the grounds it has already met the benchmark outlined, a claim environmental groups describe as misleading. … Alberta Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Grant Hunter released a statement Tuesday criticizing the strategy for using what he considers a needlessly restricting definition of protected land. …However, Hunter argues that the nearly 60 per cent of tAlberta’s land base that is publicly managed Crown land should be considered protected. …According to the federal definition, only about 15 per cent of Alberta’s land is classified as protected. …The new federal nature strategy proposes funding up to 14 new marine protected and conserved areas and at least 10 new national parks and fresh water national marine conservation areas, adding at least 1.6 million square kilometres of protected lands and up to 700,000 sq. km of protected ocean over the next four years.

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UBC reshapes forestry research to connect nature and human health

By the UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
Globe and Mail
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The University of British Columbia’s (UBC’s) Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (FES) – formerly known as the Faculty of Forestry – is advancing research that links forests and nature-based solutions to human health and sustainable forestry. It’s training the next generation of environmental stewards to think beyond traditional forestry and toward solutions for people and the planet. “Foundationally, our focus is on forests and forestry, but it goes well beyond that,” says Dr. Robert Kozak, professor and dean of FES, which recently rebranded to better represent its expanding scope. “We wanted a name that reflected what we do, and that’s thinking about environmental issues in big, holistic, interdisciplinary ways.” The faculty’s name change is part of its evolution. “We’re just beginning to fully understand the impacts that nature and natural elements can have on human health,” Dr. Kozak says.

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Criminal contempt charges approved for Walbran protesters

By Roxanne Egan-Elliott
Victoria Times Colonist
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Charges of criminal contempt have been approved for 10 people accused of breaching an injunction by blocking a Walbran Valley logging road. The charges were approved in 10 of 13 cases involving protesters who set up blockades in the area last year to prevent logging of old-growth trees. Those arrested initially faced civil contempt of court charges for the alleged breaches of the injunction. But forestry company Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership, which has rights to log in the area, asked the attorney general of B.C. in January to take over the proceedings and determine if there is enough evidence to charge those arrested with criminal contempt. …The lawyers said that if those charged plead guilty, the Crown would seek sentences ranging from a $2,250 fine to 10 days in jail, depending on whether they used devices to impede their arrest and the complexity and risk involved in those devices.

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Invasive plant drives ecological change in America’s gigantic Selway–Bitterroot Wilderness

By Lyle Lewis
Mongabay
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Selway–Bitterroot Wilderness was part of the original class of lands designated under the United States’ 1964 Wilderness Act: 1.3 million acres of steep river canyons, cold subalpine ridges, dense forest, and weather so unforgiving it shapes everything that survives there. It remains one of the most remote places in the continental U.S. …But unlike Yellowstone, it isn’t wolves or ungulates driving the most dramatic changes here. It is something easier to overlook: a lavender-flowered invader spreading through meadows, ridgetops, and the dim understory of the forest. …Thirty years ago, spotted knapweed (Centaurea stoebe) crept in from private inholdings and from hay carried by packhorse hunters. Few noticed until it was impossible to ignore. A biologist I knew was spraying it from horseback in the early 2000s, trying to hold the line. It didn’t matter. …And knapweed is not merely a competitor; it is a slow-motion trophic cascade. It suppresses native forbs, reducing nectar for pollinators. 

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The U.S. Forest Service is closing down research stations ahead of a catastrophic wildfire season

By Kristin Toussaint
Fast Company
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Last week, the US Forest Service announced that it will be closing three-quarters of its research facilities as part of a reorganization. Now, experts are worried not only about the number of scientists who might be leaving the agency, but also about how the disruption could affect the gathering and dissemination of crucial wildfire and climate change data. The restructuring comes as parts of the US face what is expected to be a catastrophic wildfire season. The most recent wildland fire outlook shows that wildfire activity is already “well above average,” with more than 16,000 wildfires reported this year. Under the reorganization plan, the Forest Service will close 57 of 77 research facilities, as well as move its headquarters from Washington, D.C., to Salt Lake City, Utah. It will also close all nine of its regional offices; some states will then get their own offices, but others will be consolidated. 

Additional coverage in News from the States: Drought and low snowpack raise wildfire risk as Trump’s budget creates a funding puzzle

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The surprising truth about logging

By Benji Jones
Vox
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The value of forest ecosystems is hard to overstate. …It’s for this reason that environmental advocates widely opposed a plan announced by the Trump administration last spring. …Failing to “fully exploit” forests for timber, Trump said, weakens our economic security, degrades fish and wildlife habitat, and sets the stage for wildfire disasters. …It is indeed hard to see a good intention for our nation’s forests through Trump’s track record. …Yet there are two important points these concerns tend to overlook, starting out with this: Logging isn’t always the environmental boogeyman it’s made out to be. …The first thing to know is that many of our public forests are already not in a truly “natural” state. …While it may sound counterintuitive, selective logging or thinning — i.e., removing some but not all of the trees — can actually make these forests healthier.

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Forest Service axes research stations as severe fire season threatens Pacific Northwest

By John Ryan
KUOW News
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service is shutting down research stations around the country, including centers in Portland, Seattle, and Wenatchee, Washington. Though much of the stations’ research is long-term, some fire experts say the cuts could hamper firefighting efforts as soon as this summer. …The agency is shutting down 50 of its 70 research stations. More than 200 people work in the Northwest research stations that are closing. …“There is a position for every permanent employee willing to accept reassignment,” Forest Service Chief Thomas Schultz Jr. said in a memo to research branch staff. Schultz Jr., a Trump appointee, was previously a lobbyist for Idaho Forest Group, one of the nation’s largest lumber producers, based in Coeur d’Alene. …Nick Smith, a spokesperson for the American Forest Resource Council, a Western states timber industry group, said he welcomes the Forest Service restructuring.

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Conservation groups hold public meetings on Oregon forest protections after feds won’t

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Before issuing sweeping protections on more than 30% of U.S. Forest Service-managed lands in 2001, federal officials spent more than a year holding 600 meetings across Western states and received more than 1.6 million public comments. …But federal officials have not held a single public meeting since they announced in August an effort to terminate the 2001 Roadless Rule, which prohibits road construction, logging and mining on roughly 60 million acres of public land, including about 2 million acres of forests in Oregon. …Instead, U.S. Rep. Andrea Salinas — a Democrat representing Oregon’s Willamette Valley and ranking member of the House Agriculture Committee’s forestry subcommittee — and several conservation groups led by the Oregon chapter of the Sierra Club are taking up the mantle. …The U.S. Department of Agriculture has so far opened a single three-week comment period since its leader, Brooke Rollins, proposed terminating the rule in August.

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Mississippi State University researchers enhance original forestry decision-making software

Mississippi State University
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Steve Bullard

STARKVILLE, Miss.—Mississippi State researchers have developed an updated version of a widely used forestry decision-making tool, improving accessibility and usability while maintaining its analytical strength. Originally created in 1999 by a team of scientists in the university’s Forest and Wildlife Research Center, the Forest Valuation and Investment Analysis software program, known as FORVAL, helps foresters and other land managers quantify and evaluate complex management decisions. Steve Bullard, CFR associate dean and FWRC associate director, who helped create the program, led the development of FORVAL-XL, the new version built specifically for Microsoft Excel. “This is the most user-friendly version yet,” Bullard said. “We maintain the ability to make complex calculations, including varied costs and revenues over time, but new features include discounted cash-flow results, sensitivity analyses and easy-to-read tables and graphs to support informed forest management decisions. The final product can also be easily exported as a PDF for sharing.”

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Study finds Tasmanian native forest logging increases potential for more severe bushfires

By Madeleine Rojahn
ABC News, Australia
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Scientists have analysed satellite images of bushfire damage and found that regrowth eucalypt forest is much more flammable than mature forest, which act as “natural fire breaks”. …David Bowman, a professor of pyrogeography who co-authored the study, said the findings supported earlier research suggesting younger trees were more flammable due to their denser canopies. Professor Bowman said this raised concerns around community safety and the sustainability of the state’s timber industry. …Suzette Weeding, from the state-owned producer Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT), said she acknowledged Dr Bowman’s study and the importance of continued bushfire research, but noted multiple factors shaped bushfire risk. …Professor Bowman said this was true due to mature trees acting as natural fire breaks, but fire-risk could arise when large landscapes were made up of regrowth.

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