Daily News for April 13, 2026

Special Feature

Premier Eby Commits to Working Forest Model, Addresses DRIPA Uncertainty and Softwood Lumber Priorities

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

Premier David Eby delivered the closing luncheon keynote at the 2026 COFI Convention on Friday, addressing a packed room of delegates and committing to a range of actions on fibre access, market diversification, value-added manufacturing, and reconciliation. The session, moderated by COFI President and CEO Kim Haakstad, included a substantive question-and-answer period. Eby opened by acknowledging both the challenges facing the sector and the role provincial policy has played in them — including restrictions around old growth and other policies that he said the government needs to do a better job of consolidating to ensure the fibre supply industry requires can actually be delivered. He described the conference theme of “Forestry is a Solution” as accurate across multiple dimensions — economic, environmental, and community — and said the province is committed to ensuring a sustainable forest sector for the long term. On tariffs, Eby said the US cannot produce enough wood to meet its own domestic demand and has been increasing imports from Europe and Russia to fill that gap — at higher cost to American consumers and at the expense of housing affordability.

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COFI Forester Panel on Predictable and Economic Access to Wood

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

he Forester Panel at the 2026 COFI Convention — titled Predictable and Economic Access to Wood — brought together five practitioners and researchers for a discussion moderated by Michael Armstrong, COFI Senior Vice President and Chief Forester. The panel covered the triad or three-zone forest management model, the gap between BC’s harvest targets, inter-jurisdictional comparisons, coastal forestry challenges, First Nations forest operations, and biomass. Panelists were Cheryl Hodder, Chief Forester of Wood Products Canada at Canfor; David Elstone, Managing Director of SparTree Group; Shannon Janzen, Principal of Hypha Consulting; Percy Guichon, CEO of Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation; and Christian Messier, Professor at the University of Quebec and co-founder of Habitat. Armstrong opened by displaying a chart showing BC’s interior and coastal sawmill production declining by approximately 50% since 2017 while other Canadian provinces have remained relatively flat.

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Fire Ecology Research and Indigenous Knowledge Lead to Common Ground on Wildfire Resilience

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

The fireside chat on wildfire prevention and resilience at the 2026 COFI Convention brought together Dr. Jill Harvey, Canada Research Chair in Fire Ecology at Thompson Rivers University, and Leonard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council. Harvey presented research findings from several active projects before the session moved into a Q&A format moderated by Joe. Harvey opened by placing the current wildfire crisis in historical context, drawing on fire scar records from interior Douglas fir trees that carry evidence of fire events stretching back 400 years. She described tree ring data from the Churn Creek protected area showing fire occurring on a 15-to-25-year cycle from 1620 through 1896 — evidence, she said, of deliberate, knowledge-informed land stewardship by Indigenous peoples over centuries. After 1896, fire activity in those records essentially ceases, reflecting the onset of industrial-era fire suppression. The result, she said, is a landscape now laden with fuel accumulated over more than a century with little natural or managed release.

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Value Chain Panel Points to Regional Clusters, Workforce Gaps and Public Narrative as Keys to Forest Sector Resilience

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

The Value Chain panel at the 2026 COFI Convention brought together perspectives from across the sector’s supply chain, with participants including Nick Arkle, CEO of Gorman Group; Kelly Marciniw, Chief Operating Officer of Zirnhelt Timber Frames and Chair of BC Wood Specialties Group; Todd Chamberlain, General Manager of the Interior Logging Association; and Blair Dickerson, Vice President of Public Affairs Canada at Domtar. The session was moderated by Sonya Zeitler Fletcher, Vice President of Market Development at Forestry Innovation Investment. Asked by Zeitler Fletcher about where Gorman Group is moving as it relates to a regional cluster, Arkle described an approach to bringing together First Nations, communities, manufacturers, and value-added producers within a defined geographic area around a shared and secure fibre supply.

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Forest Economy Panel Sees Structural Headwinds Persisting

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

The State of the Forest Economy panel opened Day 2 of the 2026 COFI Convention with a data-driven examination of trade diversification, housing demand, investment attractiveness, and BC’s declining competitive position relative to other Canadian and North American jurisdictions. The session was moderated by Kurt Niquidet, COFI’s Vice President and Chief Economist, who noted that COFI’s latest economic impact study — released earlier in the week and available at cofi.org — underscores that even during a period of contraction, forestry remains an indispensable pillar of the BC economy. Panelists were Hamir Patel, Executive Director and Paper & Forest Products Analyst at CIBC; Claire Huxtable, Senior Analyst at ERA Forest Products Research; and Jason Krips, President and CEO of the Alberta Forest Products Association.

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BC Conservative Interim Leader Halford Addresses COFI Delegates

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

Trevor Halford, Interim Leader of the Official Opposition and MLA for Surrey-White Rock, opened the second day of the 2026 COFI Convention with remarks that acknowledged the sector’s challenges directly and outlined what he said a Conservative government would prioritize. Halford said he is not a forestry expert but has spent considerable time listening to those who are, and singled out Conservative forestry critic Ward Stamer — who he said began his career in the bush 50 years ago — as someone who understands the industry through direct experience. He said the caucus hears clearly what the sector needs: secure access to fibre, streamlined permitting processes, strong Indigenous partnerships, investment in value-added and sustainable innovation, and lower costs.

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Business & Politics

Resolving softwood dispute mutually beneficial for Canada, U.S., B.C. premier says

By Brenna Owen
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — Ottawa must make a case of “mutual benefit” with the United States as it advocates for Canada’s softwood lumber industry during trade negotiations, BC Premier David Eby said Friday… “the US cannot produce enough wood to meet its domestic demand.” …The premier’s remarks came after the U.S. Department of Commerce posted its preliminary tariff determination for the sector, with total duties estimated at just short of 25%, lower than the current rate of more than 35%. …COFI’s Kim Haakstad, agreed with the premier, saying it’s important for B.C. to ensure softwood lumber doesn’t “get lost” among other industries based in Eastern Canada. …The Independent Wood Processors Association said the US ruling was “further evidence” the softwood lumber dispute mechanism has become a “broken process”. The BC Lumber Trade Council said Canadian lumber producers continue to face “unjustified and punitive trade measures.” BC Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said the province was disappointed.

  • Related coverage by Dereck Penner in the Vancouver Sun: David Eby says BC is still putting pressure on Ottawa to resolve Canada-US lumber dispute

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B.C. government easing carbon tax for pulp mills as industry grapples with future

By Mark Page
Nelson Star
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

Premier David Eby told the annual gathering of the B.C. Council of Forest Industries (COFI) on Friday said that the government plans to ease industrial carbon prices for pulp mills as the province’s forestry sector continues to struggle to remain competitive. “We have been working with COFI to address costs faced by the sector,” he said. “Whether it is in relation to water permits or carbon pricing.” …But Eby says the government wants to make it fair for pulp mills, which cannot easily reduce emissions coming from lime kilns. …These changes come amid deep struggles for B.C.’s forest industry, with mill closures and job losses across the province. The last workers left Domtar’s Crofton pulp mill just days before the COFI convention. …A panel at the COFI convention illustrated how B.C.’s annual cut declined at a much faster rate than other jurisdictions.

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