Daily News for June 30, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

US triggers decade-long USMCA review, declining 16-year extension

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 30, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

Note to our readers: With Canada Day and the US Independence Day holiday upon us, the Frogs are taking a short break. We are back Monday. Have a wonderful holiday!

The US is expected to formally decline an extension of the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement today, triggering the pact’s sunset review process. In other Business news: Trump remains undecided on bipartisan housing bill; a BC judge rejected a bid to reopen the Cowichan Aboriginal title case; Metsä Group expands its use of AI; the US goods trade deficit widened; and Japan’s housing starts rebounded.

In Forestry news: Alberta researchers say some species fail to recover after clearcutting; Coulson Aviation reflects on nighttime aerial firefighting; Canada’s winter isn’t a barrier for the spotted lanternfly; Australia assesses the legacy of Victoria’s native logging ban; and the UK prepares stronger timber due diligence rules. Meanwhile: Capilano University celebrates timber in student housing; sawdust-based foam can replace polystyrene packaging; and updates on the Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s 2026 conference, and the Southern Forest Products Association’s EXPO 2027.

Finally, California celebrates a first as eight inmates earn forestry degrees.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News

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Business & Politics

US declaration to exit USMCA to start a decade-long countdown for the pact

By David Lawder
Reuters
June 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

The Trump administration is expected to ​formally declare on Wednesday that it will not extend the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade, starting a decade-long clock to wind down the 32-year-old ‌North American free trade zone. That declaration will kick off a six-year review session, part of a “sunset clause” negotiated by President Trump’s first administration. However, it will do little to alter contentious negotiations over the pact’s future, including sweeping demands to boost US content in automotive production and trade protections to block ​Chinese goods. …Trade chiefs from the US, Mexico and Canada are expected to meet virtually on Wednesday and declare whether they ​want to extend the pact for another 16 years. …Failure to reach agreement on revisions to USMCA would keep the trade pact in an indefinite limbo, with similar review sessions annually for the next 10 years. …The review ​and sunset process is separate from a termination clause that the US could exercise, triggering a withdrawal within six months.

Related coverage by: 

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B.C. judge throws out property owner’s bid to reopen Cowichan lands decision

By Gordon Hoekstra
The Vancouver Sun
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — A BC judge has ruled against a Richmond company that sought to reopen the Cowichan Tribes Aboriginal title case. Last year’s landmark B.C. Supreme Court decision found the Cowichan held Aboriginal title to a swath of land in southeast Richmond, including privately owned lands. The application to reopen the case was brought by the Montrose companies, which owns warehouses, a Coca-Cola distribution centre and other facilities in the area. The company was not involved in the trial that led to the 2025 ruling, but said it affected the status of its property and, in one case, led to a potential deal being put on hold. In a decision dated Monday, BC Supreme Court Justice Barbara Young dismissed the company’s application. …She said the proper place for Montrose to make its case is through an appeal.

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Forestry still shapes B.C.

By Ian Biana
Resource Works
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Kurt Niquidet

Kurt Niquidet grew up in Williams Lake, a place shaped by forestry. When he speaks about it, it’s from the perspective of someone who knows. “I grew up in Williams Lake and really a forestry-dependent community,” he says. Kurt Niquidet is vice-president and chief economist at the BC Council of Forest Industries, with a career that bridges policy, academia, and central banking. He holds a PhD in natural resource economics and policy from the University of Groningen and has worked at the Bank of Canada and the University of British Columbia. He also serves as an adjunct professor at UBC’s Faculty of Forestry and has published widely on B.C. forest policy. Now, he is applying that perspective to new data on the sector’s reach across British Columbia. His latest report, Rooted in BC: Economic Impact of Forestry, tracks forestry’s economic footprint across the province. The findings challenge a common assumption. Forestry is not just a rural story.

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Trump says he’s unsure on signing affordable housing bill

By Joey Garrison
USA Today
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON – President Trump said he hasn’t decided whether he will sign a bipartisan housing bill, dismissing the landmark affordable housing legislation as “a big yawn” and “so unimportant” compared to an unrelated bill he supports to overhaul voting in elections. Trump told reporters on Monday, June 29 that he won’t make a decision on The 21st Century Road to Housing Act until it arrives on his desk. The president abruptly canceled a signing ceremony last week for the housing bill and said he won’t sign it until Congress passes the SAVE America Act ‒ a stalled bill he backs that would require photo identification and proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections and prohibit universal mail-in voting across the country. …The housing bill is the first major piece of legislation that passed Congress in more than three decades to address the nation’s affordable housing crisis.

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Metsä Group to deploy next-generation AI for tissue converting and wood procurement

Metsä Group
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FINLAND — Metsä Group and Qutwo, a Finnish AI company, are launching a collaboration aimed at deepening the use of artificial intelligence. Metsä will focus initially on productivity in tissue converting lines and on optimising the routing and use of wood from forest to mill, according to Metsä Group. The platform is intended to take into account a broader range of variables and to optimise complex systems simultaneously. The plan includes measures to increase the value derived from wood raw material and to reduce variable costs between the forest and the mill. The work on wood procurement will aim to use multiple factors concurrently to guide the most efficient use of wood from forest to mill and to raise overall value. Metsä already uses AI in predicting forest damage, pricing wood trade and silviculture services, and in valuing forest biodiversity.

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Finance & Economics

US goods trade deficit widens as companies take advantage of the Trump administration’s pivot to alternative tariffs

By Oliver Ward
Politico
June 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The U.S. goods trade deficit is widening, the Commerce Department said Friday, suggesting stockpiling ahead of higher tariffs and a continued reliance on imports for the domestic data center rollout, analysts say. The goods trade deficit for May jumped more than $20 billion to $105.8 billion, up from $83 billion in April, according to Census Bureau data published Friday. The latest numbers are sure to rankle the Trump administration, which has made reducing the deficit a pillar of its trade policy goals. Scott Lincicome at the Cato Institute said “You’re in the window after the IEEPA tariffs and before the Section 301 tariffs,” Lincicome said, referring to the sweeping emergency tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which were overturned by the Supreme Court in February. “So, there’s a nice opportunity for importers to bring in as much as possible before they might face higher tariffs.”

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Japan Housing Starts Rebound More than Estimated

Trading Economics
June 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Japan’s housing starts surged 33.9% yoy in May 2026, sharply accelerating from a 11.4% increase in the previous month and marking the second straight month of expansion. It was also the fastest growth since March 2025, topping market expectations of 31.8%. Growth was broad-based across most segments, including owner-occupied homes (31.8% vs 19.5% in April), rental housing (33.3% vs 17.3%), built-for-sale housing (39.2% vs 3.4%), and two-by-four homes (24.8% vs 64.8%). In contrast, prefabricated housing fell 3.4%, swinging from a 11.1% increase in April.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Capilano University opens first student housing building with exposed mass-timber dining pavilion

By BC Ministry of Infrastructure
Government of British Columbia
June 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

NORTH VANCOUVER, BC — Students at Capilano University (CapU) now have access to more housing options with the opening of the first on-campus student housing building at the university’s North Vancouver campus. …The new six-storey student housing building named Treehouse reflects a shared vision of “a home in the woods. …The new student housing building provides 362 on-campus homes for students on the North Shore, helping them focus on their studies while easing pressure on the local rental housing market. The building includes a 250-seat, mass-timber dining hall connected to the student housing building will provide meal service to students living on campus, as well as faculty, staff and commuter students. The dining space will support student life and create additional opportunities for students to connect and build community on campus.

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Sawdust foam emerges as potential alternative to polystyrene packaging

By Sichong Wang
Packaging Insights
June 30, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

©ACSPublications

Scientists have developed sawdust-based foams that could offer an alternative to fossil fuel-based materials used in protective packaging, such as polystyrene (PS) packing peanuts and box inserts. Published in ACS Applied Polymer Materials, the prototypes incorporate cellulose binders and other additives to create rigid or flexible materials. According to the scientists, some versions matched PS strength and impact resistance, while a beeswax coating improved water resistance. …The team blended fine processed wood powder or coarse unprocessed mill waste with cellulose binders and cross-linking ingredients. Then, the researchers poured the mixtures into molds, froze them, and freeze-dried the foams to remove all the moisture. A final heat-drying step activated the cross-linked networks. The properties of the prototype foams can be different depending on the type of cellulose binders. Carbomethyl cellulose versions were stiffer than PS, while hydroxypropyl cellulose produced a softer material, according to the research.

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Forestry

New research suggests invasive spotted lanternfly may be able to survive Canadian winters

By Faith Greco
CBC News
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

©Govt of Canada

Research out of the Great Lakes Forestry Centre in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., is raising new concerns about an invasive insect that has been steadily moving closer to the Canadian border. “Unfortunately, what we have found is that the spotted lanternfly, particularly their eggs, are actually able to withstand really cold temperatures,” said Amanda Roe, a research scientist with Natural Resources Canada based at the forestry centre. Recent studies have found that spotted lanternfly eggs can survive temperatures up to -25 C, suggesting winter may not be enough to prevent the destructive pest from establishing populations in parts of Canada, she said. “Winter itself isn’t going to be a barrier, particularly in the areas of Canada where their impact might be greatest,” Roe said. …The insect feeds on more than 100 plant species …including maple trees, something that has caught the attention of Canada’s maple syrup industry.

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New University of Alberta-led research found some species fail to recover even 100 years after clearcutting

By Sarah Vernon
University of Alberta
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

EDMONTON — Current clearcutting practices sometimes outpace the recovery times of vital boreal forest species, according to a groundbreaking global analysis led by University of Alberta researchers. The study was co-led by biologist Dr. Ellen Macdonald and ecologist Dr. Anne McIntosh. It is the first of its kind to examine an extended timeline for recovery and a wide range of life in boreal forests after clearcutting… Analyzing 190 datasets across North America, Europe, and Russia, researchers tracked how clearcutting affects birds, small mammals, insects, spiders, plants and lichens. While faster-growing broadleaf forests like aspen and birch often recovered within 30 years — soon enough to fall within typical 60- to 80-year logging cycles — recovery in mixed and coniferous forests took much longer. In these habitats, recovery took more than 55 years for small mammals like mice and voles, 85 years for flowering plants, 95 years for lichens, and more than 100 years for mosses.

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Warming streams are pushing young salmon beyond their limits

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Scott Hinch

As climate change warms rivers across B.C., young salmon are facing increasing heat stress at vulnerable stages of their lives.  Researchers from UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s Pacific Salmon Ecology and Conservation Lab found that younger fish cope with heat differently than older fish, and that current methods may be underestimating the risks salmon face in warming waterways. We spoke with Dr. Scott Hinch, professor in the Department of Forest & Conservation Sciences, about what these findings mean for salmon conservation. Hinch told us: We examined how young salmon respond to warming water and whether current methods accurately measure heat tolerance. Most studies assess fish at rest, but juvenile salmon are constantly moving to find food and avoid predators, so we need to mimic real-world conditions. We also considered how age and prior temperature exposures influence responses. 

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Coulson Aviation’s night vision firefighting helped battle summer fires on Vancouver Island

By Austin Kelly
Alberni Valley News
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©CoulsonAviation

…When it came to fighting two of the worst fires in Vancouver Island’s history, BC Wildfire Service took advantage of Coulson Aviation’s successful night vision aerial firefighting program. Almost 15 years to the day after testing how effective a helicopter could be dropping water on hot spots at night, the Wesley Ridge fire broke out between Port Alberni and Qualicum Beach. “The first trial was 22 targets and with 22 loads, we were able to extinguish it and put water in all 22 (targets) and that’s when we knew we had something,” said Wayne Coulson, CEO of the Alberni-based Coulson Aviation. …One of the other challenges for aerial night firefighting was filling the helicopters with water. …Coulson said government officials didn’t believe it was safe to hover fill at night so on a November night in 2017 a company aircrew spent three hours at the Alberni Valley’s Sproat Lake testing the process.

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In a Historic First, Eight Incarcerated Students Earn Forestry Degrees

California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — For the first time in the state, eight incarcerated students have earned an Associate of Science degree in Forestry, marking the historic milestone at the Lake Tahoe Community College (LTCC) Rising Scholars Program (RSP) graduation on June 26, 2026. The achievement was part of a graduating class of 23 where all students obtained a Foundational Skills Certificate or Certificate of Achievement in Forestry. Many of the graduates also serve as hand crew members in CDCR Conservation (Fire) Camps in Northern California. Through a partnership between CDCR, LTCC and the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE), incarcerated students in RSP can earn stackable forestry certificates. …Studies show that incarcerated individuals who participate in correctional education are 48 percent less likely to return to prison within three years than those who did not have access to these opportunities. 

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Savannah Sets the Stage for EXPO 2027

By Eric Gee
The Southern Forest Products Association
June 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Last month I wrote about why Savannah made sense for SFPA’s 39th Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition. The working forests, the port, the poetry of returning the show to the Deep South. I meant every word. …This is a city that has been in the business of moving goods for a very long time, and it shows. Savannah doesn’t just host commerce. It lives it. That felt worth saying again, because it connects directly to where we want to take EXPO. The theme is Industry in Motion, and as we move deeper into planning, that phrase is becoming less of a tagline and more of a genuine question: what does motion look like for your operation right now? Mills are modernizing. Markets are shifting. The conversations happening on our show floor in August of 2027 should reflect that, and we want your help shaping them.

Read the full Lumber Shorts by clicking →READ MORE

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Worker says Victoria’s forestry transition program ‘decimated’ Gippsland’s small towns

By Madeleine Stuchbery
ABC News Australia
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

As the Victorian Forestry Transition Program comes to a close, some residents in regions that relied on the timber trade are questioning what has been done to build a replacement economy. The state government’s transition program ends today, two-and-a-half years after Victoria’s native logging industry was brought to an end with the flourish of a pen. The government committed $1.5 billion to support the transition, including $320 million to the Forestry Transition Program to provide financial support for affected workers, businesses and communities. But some residents remain unconvinced enough has been done to replace the jobs lost. …A Victorian auditor general’s report into the end of the industry, released in April this year, critiqued the government’s transition plan and where funds were allocated. It found 80 per cent of displaced timber workers were in full-time employment before the end of the industry, a figure that fell to 60 per cent after the end of the sector.

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UK government to consult on stronger timber regulations to enhance due diligence and sustainable supply chains

Wood & Panel Europe
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The UK Government has announced plans to launch a public consultation aimed at strengthening the country’s timber regulations. The initiative… is expected to begin later this year. The proposed consultation follows extensive discussions over the future of timber regulation in the UK. It also comes ahead of the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), which is scheduled to come into force at the end of 2026. The consultation is intended to ensure that the UK maintains an effective and practical regulatory framework while supporting sustainable forestry and responsible sourcing practices. Under the proposed changes, businesses operating in Great Britain with an annual turnover exceeding £1 million and using forest commodities or wood products would be required to undertake due diligence. The purpose would be to verify that timber and forest-based products have been produced in accordance with relevant local legislation in their country of origin.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Building Canada Stronger — Join the Conversation at the 2026 WPAC Conference

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
June 30, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Get ready for WPAC’s annual conference, September 22-23, 2026, in beautiful Victoria, BC! This year’s theme, Building Canada Stronger: Navigating the Global Wood Pellet Transition, covers securing supply, resilient energy and next-gen bioenergy. Day 2 focuses on the innovation, decarbonization and domestic markets. Sessions include:

  • BECCS, CDRs and Carbon Markets: Examine how bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) can deliver benefits beyond emissions reduction, including fibre utilization, export competitiveness and forest sector resilience. Also explore Canada’s readiness, global project developments and the role of carbon markets and investment signals.
  • Strengthening Canada’s Energy Resilience with Biomass: Heat, Industry, and Domestic Supply: Explore how biomass can help strengthen Canada’s energy security by delivering reliable, low-carbon heat across diverse applications. Discover the projects, infrastructure and logistics needed to scale domestic biomass energy nationwide.
  • Industry Leadership Session—What We Do Next: Engage with WPAC Board members to discuss the strategic priorities for WPAC and the Canadian wood pellet sector in the next few years.

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US leads global CO2 emissions increase in 2025, report finds

By Seher Dareen
Reuters
June 29, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

LONDON — The United States accounted for about a third of the rise in global carbon emissions in ​2025, as higher gas prices pushed power producers ‌back to coal, an Energy Institute report showed. Highlights from the report include:

  • US coal ​consumption jumped 10% last year, reversing a shift ​towards cleaner fuels and helping lift overall ⁠emissions.
  • Global carbon emissions from the energy sector rose ​1.1% to 35,806 million metric tons of carbon dioxide.
  • Europe’s carbon emissions from the energy sector increased by 0.5%, while China’s rose by 0.7% in ​2025.’
  • Electricity demand rose ​faster than ⁠supply, increasing 3% year-on-year, driven by electric vehicles, data centres and artificial intelligence.
  • Global oil consumption ​rose 1.3% in 2025 to 103 million ​barrels ⁠per day, compared with a 1.1% increase in 2024.
  • In China, gasoline and diesel use declined ⁠last year, extending a ​trend in 2024.

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Health & Safety

Clinton Township woman among 3 firefighters killed while battling Colorado wildfire, officials confirm

By Jenny Sherman
Click on Detroit
June 29, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US West

MESA COUNTY, Co. – A 38-year-old Clinton Township woman was among three firefighters who were killed on Saturday while responding to a wildfire in western Colorado near the Utah border. Emily Barker, a member of the U.S. Forest Service Rifle Helitack crew, was assigned to the Knowles and Gore fires when a fast-moving burnover incident led to emergency conditions, trapping her and several other first responders. Nick Hutcherson, 27, of Glendale, Ariz., and Sydney Watson, 26, of Warrior, Ala., were also killed. Hutcherson was a member of the U.S. Forest Service Kaibab National Forest, and Watson was assigned to the U.S. Wildland Fire Service Rifle Helitack. All three were dispatched to the fire as part of the helitack crew to quickly respond and assess a wildfire. …Two other firefighters on the crew survived and are being treated for injuries. “This is an incredibly difficult moment for the entire wildland fire community,” said Forest Service Deputy Chief Sarah Fisher. 

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Forest Fires

Water bombers make ‘significant’ progress on wildfires burning near Labrador City, government says

By Alex Kennedy
CBC News
June 30, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

Fire crews are continuing to battle two wildfires that forced some residents of Labrador West to evacuate. Newfoundland and Labrador’s Department of Forestry, Agriculture and Lands said in a Monday night social media post that water bombers made “significant progress” on wildfires in the Walsh River area west of Labrador and the De Mille Lake area east of Wabush. Around 120 residents were evacuated from their homes and cabins on Monday afternoon. The Town of Labrador City said that the evacuation order remains in place as fire suppression efforts continue. Labrador City Mayor Jordan Brown said on Tuesday morning that the fire was between eight and nine kilometres from the town, and that the region is blanketed in a thick smoke. …An incident management team will be on the ground in Labrador West on Tuesday to help fire crews, the department said. Forestry officials will reassess conditions on Tuesday evening.

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Fire southwest of Pueblo explodes to 23,000 acres amid 100-mph wind gusts

By Olivia Prentzel
The Colorado Sun
June 29, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©Pueblo County Sheriff

A wildfire that sparked in Custer County on Monday morning has blown up to 25,000 acres, fueled by winds gusting to 100 mph that have grounded any chance for air support, officials said. The Aspen Acres fire, burning near Rye and spreading into Pueblo County, was the latest dangerous fire in a series that ignited across parched southern Colorado and the Western Slope amid extreme heat and gusty winds. Because of the high winds, firefighters could not attack the fire from above, the Pueblo County Sheriff’s Office said Monday evening, saying an “unspecified number of structures” were damaged by the fire. …The entire town of Beulah was ordered to evacuate at 9:15 a.m. Monday, following an earlier evacuation order for residents near the Aspen Acres neighborhood. Two fires are burning in the area, one near the subdivision along Highway 165 and another near Lake Isabel, according to the Custer County Sheriff’s Office. 

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