Daily News for March 06, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

Trump and Trudeau talk but trade war will last for foreseeable future

The Tree Frog Forestry News
March 6, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Trudeau says talk with Trump was ‘colourful’  but trade war will last for foreseeable future. Related headlines include:

In related news: Canada requests World Trade Organization consultations; USMCA negotiators launch advocacy group for free trade; how Canada’s construction business can adapt to tariffs; and Canada’s counter tariffs come with procurement complications

In Forestry news: BC lumber producers still face fibre shortages; Steelworkers urge BC to increase fibre supply;  5,600 fired USDA employees to be rehired; what Trump’s push for more logging means for Oregon and Wyoming; William Nikolakis wins UBC Faculty of Forestry Outstanding Research Award; and Dakota College at Bottineau receives SFI Leadership in Education Award.

Finally, BC’s Evans Lake Forestry Education Society launches its online fundraising auction.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News

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Business & Politics

Homeowners face risk of higher insurance premiums as tariffs put pressure on building material costs

By Clare O’Hara
Globe and Mail
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Canadian homeowners can expect to face higher premiums when they renew their home insurance, as new U.S. tariffs add pressure on property and casualty insurers by raising the cost of building materials and appliances. …The tariffs placed by Mr. Trump on building materials such as aluminum, steel and lumber will add extra costs for insurers to the goods used in replacing and repairing homes, cars and businesses, Brett Weltman, spokesperson for the Insurance Bureau of Canada, said. “While we don’t yet have a precise picture of the scope of these effects, over time, tariffs will hurt consumers and families on both sides of the border,” he said. …Bill Premdas, executive director of KPMG’s Canadian insurance practice, said a prolonged tariff battle with the U.S. could put pressure on claims costs as many of the resources used to rebuild and repair homes are covered by cross-border trade agreements. [Globe and Mail subscription required for full access to this story]

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Trump’s trade war will last for ‘foreseeable future,’ Trudeau says

By Uday Rana
Global News
March 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Justin Trudeau

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Thursday said he had a “colourful” phone call with U.S. President Donald Trump, but the trade war imposed by the president will last for the “foreseeable future.” “I can confirm that it was a colorful call. And it was also a very substantive call,” Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa. He added, “We talked about a range of issues, of course, primarily the trade war that they have chosen to unjustly launch on Canada. …Trudeau added that Canada will not be backing down from its retaliation. …He also hinted at possible relief for Canadians affected by tariffs. …Trump said in a post Wednesday on his Truth Social platform that Trudeau called to ask him what can be done about the tariffs. “I told him that many people have died from Fentanyl and nothing has convinced me that it has stopped,” Trump wrote.

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This Canadian forged the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. Now he wants to save it

By Nick Taylor-Vaisey
Politico.com
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

OTTAWA — Steve Verheul used to get under the American trade negotiator’s skin. …Eventually, the Americans forged a deal with the Mexicans and Canadians, and in 2018 signed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. …Now, as Trump slams Canada and Mexico with new tariffs, Verheul and a pair of trade veterans want to save the USMCA. …Verheul is co-launching the Coalition for North American Trade, a three-nation business group advocating for the long-term benefits of free trade. The CNAT is the brainchild of Kevin Brady, the Republican former chair of the House Ways and Means Committee. …Earlier this year, the trio launched their coalition and today, they’re bringing their pitch to Washington. …But until tariffs disappear, Verheul sees no prospect for productive talks. “I think the only hope is that the impact on the US economy, and the stock market, and various companies is extreme enough to create pushback within the US,” he says.

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Canada requests WTO consultations with US over ‘unjustified tariffs,’ says ambassador

Reuters in CTV News
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

GENEVA — Canada has requested consultations with the United States on “unjustified tariffs” at the World Trade Organization, Canada’s ambassador to the WTO in Geneva said. “The U.S. decision leaves us with no choice but to respond to protect Canadian interests,” Ambassador Nadia Theodore said. …Bilateral consultations are the first stage of formal dispute settlement. If within 60 days no solution is found, then Canada could request adjudication by the Geneva-based organization’s Dispute Settlement Body. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced immediate 25% tariffs on C$30 billion worth of U.S. imports. If need be, Canada will target another C$125 billion worth in 21 days’ time, he said. …China formally launched a dispute at the WTO on February 5 over a 10% tariff imposed by Trump on Chinese goods, in moves that raised concern about a new trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

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“This will hurt us”: Kalesnikoff on lumber tariffs

By Storrm Lennie
My Nelson Now
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ken Kalesnikoff

Ken Kalesnikoff, owner and CEO of Kalesnikoff Mass Timber, has called U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods “unbelievable.” …Kalesnikoff says the 25 per cent tariffs imposed on all Canadian goods pose a critical threat to the forestry industry in the province, which may also see the duties on softwood lumber exports increase to 27 per cent in August. “The BC industry is dealing with the unfair duties that are being charged by the U.S. on lumber. They just announced an increase to the tune of almost 27 per cent from 14.5 per cent. That was going to be bad enough, then to get 25 per cent on top of that with these tariffs is just unbelievable.” …This forced the company to explore market diversification, which, fortunately for Kalesnikoff, means it’s less reliant on U.S. exports. …It’s still too early to determine the full impact these tariffs and anti-dumping duties could have on the company’s operations and finances…

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B.C. lumber producers face challenges to gain greater access to timber amid tariffs

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
March 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Russ Taylor

Canadian producers of softwood lumber are facing challenges to gain greater access to timber in British Columbia as they cope with new U.S. tariffs stacked on top of existing duties. Vancouver-based forestry analyst Russ Taylor said the B.C. government finds itself in a bind on the forestry file, after Tuesday’s implementation of 25-per-cent tariffs, which are in addition to the current duty rate of 14.4 per cent for Canadian softwood shipped south of the border. “The government’s forest policy in the last five years has gone from conservation of the forests and to almost preservation – locking up the timber rather making it available to the industry,” Mr. Taylor said in an interview on Wednesday. …Mr. Taylor said the B.C. budget tabled on Tuesday forecasts that tree harvesting would dip to 29 million cubic metres in the 2027-28 fiscal year, and there remains no timetable for when the harvest might eventually rise to 45 million cubic metres annually. [Globe and Mail subscription required for full access]

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B.C. government’s budget prioritizes tariff threat and strengthens, diversifies and responds to uncertainty

United Steelworkers
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – The United Steelworkers union (USW) acknowledges the difficult position facing the B.C. government in its 2025 budget and applauds the thoughtful, diligent focus on priorities by Minister of Finance Brenda Bailey. U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats and the imposition of tariffs have created uncertainty for important exports, including lumber, copper, zinc and other essential products. …“Workers are calling for action to grow and diversify the economy and supply chains, reducing dependence on the U.S. market while ensuring jobs in mining, critical minerals and processing, forestry and lumber manufacturing,” said Scott Lunny, USW Western Canada Director. …B.C. should prepare for a wave of layoffs in the forest sector due to rising duties. …The USW is urging the B.C. government to increase the supply of fibre and streamline the permitting process in the logging sector to support the primary industry and facilitate ongoing efforts to expand manufacturing, Mass Timber and other value-added industries.

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New duties strain B.C.’s lumber industry

Global News
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

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Snuneymuxw First Nation launches trucking company for Vancouver Island

Nanaimo News Bulletin
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Snuneymuxw First Nation has launched a transportation company to strengthen Vancouver Island’s supply chain and spur the region’s economy. Sarlequun Transport Inc. will offer trucking services for general freight, forestry, construction and mining industries, stated a Snuneymuxw press release, offering “export and import from Vancouver Island to the world, providing transportation, documentation, and logistics,” and will operate under the nation’s economic development corporation – Petroglyph Development Group. The company has a 2.83 hectare property on Maughan Road in Nanaimo, complete with trucks, forklifts and a warehouse to service shippers on Vancouver Island, according to the press release. Ian Simpson, Petroglyph CEO, said the new company will build on Snuneymuxw’s legacy. …Snuneymuxw First Nation Chief Michael Wyse said the venture is important for his nation’s growth.

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New Brunswick forestry towns on edge as U.S. tariffs, duties pile up

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
March 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Like other New Brunswick forestry towns, the rural community of Kedgwick is on edge. The economy of the municipality relies on two major sawmills, J.D. Irving Ltd. and Groupe Savoie, and several smaller forest operations. …About 24,000 New Brunswickers work in the forestry sector, and 80 per cent of the industry’s output — softwood and hardwood lumber, pulp and paper, shingles, fibre and strand board — goes to the United States. …The market share for Canadian wood in the U.S. has dropped from 34 per cent in 2000 to 23 per cent last year because of multiple factors, including the duties, said Dustin Jalbert, a wood products economist with the U.S. price forecasting firm Fastmarkets. But there still isn’t enough American supply to completely replace Canadian wood, even at higher prices, and the U.S. industry couldn’t ramp up to meet that demand for three to five years, he added.

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Tariffs arrive when the pulp and paper business is already in a ‘difficult place,’ says CEO

By Jonathan Migneault
CBC News
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The CEO of the pulp and paper mill in Kapuskasing, Ontario, says he was not surprised, but is disappointed by US tariffs that are expected to have a big impact on Canada’s forestry sector. “The pulp and paper business is in a very difficult place in Ontario,” said Terry Skiffington, the CEO of Kap Paper. In January, the century-old mill, historically known as Spruce Falls, received a $10-million loan from the provincial government to help the business diversify… by building a biomass plant which would produce energy by burning wood that can’t be used for paper production. …”We can move products into Europe, into Asia and into India relatively competitively, which is odd intuitively when we’re sitting in the centre of Canada,” he said. …”I’m feeling like I’ve done a few rounds in the ring with Mike Tyson, but our intention is to remain on that course,” Skiffington said.

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Toilet paper giant Kruger, hit by tariff uncertainty, delays expansion decision and withholds guidance

By Christinne Muschi
The Canadian Press in the Globe and Mail
March 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KP Tissue says it won’t provide guidance for its next quarter and has delayed a decision on a major capital investment because of US tariffs. The publicly traded Mississauga-based company, which owns 12.5% of Kruger Products and shares the same management team, typically provides earnings guidance when it reports earnings. But CFO Dino Bianco said that Kruger/KP would not provide profit guidance for Q1 “given the evolving news and volatility.” …Roughly one-third of Kruger’s revenues are exposed to tariffs, made at its nine Canadian plants and Canadian softwood pulp used by its one US facility, in Memphis. The company has also delayed a decision on where to locate a new US$600-million tissue manufacturing facility. Kruger has scouted locations in Canada and the US and had expected to make its pick in early 2025. …Further complicating the decision, he said, are the exchange rate, possible reciprocal tariffs, a potential recession and “collateral impacts around freight.” 

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Finance & Economics

Lumber Prices Hit Two-Year High As US Investigates Canadian Softwood

The Globe and Mail
March 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber prices have risen to their highest level in more than two years on news that U.S. President Donald Trump has ordered an investigation into softwood imports from Canada. The lumber probe is the latest salvo in an escalating trade war between the neighbouring countries. Analysts say that the investigation lays the groundwork for potential new %Tariffs on Canadian lumber, notably softwood imports. …Consequently, lumber futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange have risen 3.5% over the past day to trade at $657 U.S. per 1,000 board feet, the highest level since mid-2022. However, while lumber prices are marching higher on the threat of U.S. tariffs, the stocks of Canadian lumber companies are tanking. Shares of Interfor fell 9% while the stock of %Canfor declined 6% in Toronto trading on March 4, the day that the 25% tariffs went into effect.

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Forestry industry questions aspects of B.C.’s budget

By Wolf Depner
Terrace Standard
March 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. Council of Forest Industries (COFI) welcomed B.C.’s responses to American tariffs, but questioned aspects of the provincial budget tabled Tuesday. B.C.’s forests minister, meanwhile, is calling on Ottawa to step up supports.  Kim Haakstad, president and CEO of COFI, said her organization welcomes the budget’s focus on responding to new tariffs announced March 4. “We are disappointed by the absence of dedicated support for the forest sector,” Haakstad said. “As Premier (David) Eby and (Forests) Minister (Ravi) Parmar have acknowledged, the forest sector will be particularly hard hit by the new tariffs at a time when the industry is already facing significant challenges. These broad-based tariffs apply to all forest product exports … adding further pressure on workers, companies and communities already affected by softwood lumber duties.” …COFI remains committed to working with the government to advance solutions that strengthen the forestry sector, improve the provincial economy and diversify markets. 

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KP Tissue reports Q4, 2024 net loss of $13.7 million

KP Tissue Inc.
March 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MISSISSAUGA, Ontario — KP Tissue reported its Q4, 2024 and full year 2024 financial and operational results of KPT and Kruger Products. Highlights include: Revenue was $539.6 million in Q4 2024 compared to $482.3 million in Q4 2023, an increase of $57.3 million or 11.9%; and Net loss was $13.7 million in Q4 2024 compared to net income of $16.5 million in Q4 2023, a decrease of $30.2 million. …Kruger Products Full Year 2024 Financial Highlights include: Revenue was $2,049.9 million in Fiscal 2024 compared to $1,873.0 million in Fiscal 2023, an increase of $176.9 million or 9.4%; and Net income was $23.8 million in Fiscal 2024 compared to a net loss of $5.3 million in Fiscal 2023, an improvement in net income of $29.1 million.

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Tariffs could raise prices for new homes—see how much more it could cost buyers

By Mike Winters
NBC Los Angeles
March 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump’s administration imposed new tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico while increasing existing tariffs on goods from China, a move expected to raise prices for new homes, according to a recent CoreLogic report. That’s largely because tariffs affect essential home construction materials, including wood products, cement, steel, aluminum and appliances, so homebuilding costs are projected to rise. As a result, construction costs could increase by 4% to 6% over the next 12 months, adding roughly $17,000 to $22,000 to the sticker prices for new homes, according to CoreLogic. With the cost of a newly constructed home averaging around $422,000, these added expenses may further strain affordability for first-time homebuyers, the study says.

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Why the US National Association of Home Builders is hyper focused on tariffs

By Vincent Salandro
Builder Online
March 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Trump administration is moving at a record pace on a varied list of priorities, but insiders hope a focus on housing will remain at the top of the agenda in 2025. With housing affordability a central focus, bills addressing zoning, permitting, workforce development, and taxes are taking shape. …Despite all these areas of concern, one concern looms largest – tariffs. Approximately 22% of the products used in the average home are imported from China, 70% of lumber used in construction is sourced from Canada, and Mexico is the largest provider of gypsum. …The NAHB has advocated for an exemption for building materials, and the association continues to engage in conversations with lawmakers about the harmful effects these tariffs could have on housing affordability. NAHB’s Karl Eckhart says “These Canadian and Mexican tariffs are going to have a direct and painful impact on the price to build a house.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

How Canada’s planning, design and construction industries can adapt to the Trump tariffs

By Lloyd Alter, Architect
Carbon Upfront!
March 5, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Planning, design and construction must adapt to this new world of tariffs and trade barriers. Canada has already imposed its own tariffs on products made in the US… but it is not just about materials and products; we must change what we build and where we build it. Some ideas for a Patriotic Canadian Built Environment: 1) More Mass Timber. Nordic, Element 5, Structurecraft and others have made major investments in mass timber, much of which is exported south. If the industry is to survive, we need a massive pivot to mass timber construction in Canada. …2) Make Canadian Wood Fibre Insulation. TimberHP in Maine has shown how a pulp and paper-based timber economy can pivot to insulation. …3) Electrify everything. Canada is an electricity powerhouse. Make every building Passivhaus to reduce demand and increase resilience. …4) Restructure from north-south to east-west. …5) More renovation and retrofit. …6) Design for a Sufficiency Economy. …7) Ban Sprawl.

 

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Canada’s counter tariffs bring procurement complications

The REMI Network
March 5, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

Procurement complications have arisen throughout Canada as businesses grapple with a long list of products from the US now to be subject to a 25% import tax. For the buildings sector, that brings supply chain challenges and added costs for construction, property/facilities management and operations with new surcharges attached to a broad range of structural materials, equipment and furnishings from the US. …The first round of Canada’s retaliatory tariffs are now in force. A subsequent roster of designated products, estimated at roughly $125 billion, has been posted for advance consultation. The new expanded list of Canadian countermeasures proposes tariffs on: key metals such as steel, iron, aluminum, copper, nickel, tin, titanium and zinc; stone such as granite, marble, travertine and sandstone; cement and concrete; gypsum and plasters; glass, ceramics and brick; rubber; plastics; and minerals and chemical formulations.

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Canada Invests in Sustainable Wood Construction in Ontario, Creating 319 New Residential Units

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
March 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

TORONTO — The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources announced a federal contribution of more than $5.9 million for four green construction and technology projects across Ontario, which will support the use of low-carbon and processed wood in the Canadian construction sector. This funding is helping to protect Canadian industry and to build more housing for Canadians. The funding includes: More than $900,000 to Assembly Corp. for the development of an innovative design and seismic system for a 62-unit, all-wood building in Toronto; $1 million to Sean Mason Homes to deploy an innovative, hybrid, mass timber and steel system for the five-storey, 38-unit Rainwater Condominium project; $1 million to Post Office Limited Partnership to deploy an innovative, wood-based and sustainable building solution to reconstruct and add nine storeys to a two-storey heritage post office in Oshawa; and more than $3 million to Timmerman Timberworks to develop, study and certify next-generation mass timber building products.

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Vienna House: Affordable and sustainable multi-family housing

naturally:wood
March 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vienna House explores and showcases mass timber as a solution to help alleviate the current shortage of affordable multi-family housing. This seven-storey, hybrid residential building will have 123 units ranging from studios to four bedrooms, accommodating a demographically diverse range of residents including low-income families, seniors and people with disabilities. …As a Mass Timber Demonstration Program project, the design team is sharing their learnings about mass timber hybrid prefabricated construction best practices, focusing on not-for-profit housing owners/operators, and the consultants and builders who work with them. Vienna House is a partnership between BC Housing, the City of Vancouver through its Vancouver Affordable Housing Endowment Fund, and the More Than a Roof Housing Society.

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Forestry

Trump’s Canadian tariffs include lumber. He is pushing to cut down American trees instead.

By Laura Paddison
CNN Climate
March 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump is promising to unleash the US timber industry by allowing companies to raze swaths of federally protected national forests. …His order — which calls for the ramping up of the domestic timber production to avoid reliance on “foreign producers” — was followed by sweeping 25% tariffs on Canadian products, including lumber. …However, it’s more complex than simply swapping out Canadian imports for homegrown timber, said industry experts. …Meanwhile, environmental groups say clearcutting national forests will pollute the air and water and exacerbate climate change. Anna Kelly, White House deputy press secretary, referred to multiple organizations that have released statements of support about opening up federal land for logging, including the American Loggers Council, the American Forest Resource Council and the Forest Landowners Association. Increasing logging on federal lands would increase the supply of logs for US industry, said FEA’s Rocky Goodnow… but it won’t replace Canadian imports in the near term.

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Faculty of Forestry at the University of British Columbia: Outstanding Research Award

By the Faculty of Forestry
The University of British Columbia
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

William Nikolakis

UBC Forestry wishes to congratulate Dr. William Nikolakis, winner of the Faculty of Forestry Outstanding Research Award! William researches Indigenous land and natural resource governance, focusing on Indigenous rights and natural resources law. He collaborates with Indigenous communities to support self-governance, economic empowerment, and environmental stewardship. His work includes studying cultural burning practices and improving wildfire and forest management strategies. This award recognizes the outstanding research accomplishments of a faculty member (Assistant or Associate) early in their career, based on the quality, quantity, and impact of their research in the previous two years.

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Ministry of Forests allocates $2.85M for Kootenay wildfire prevention

The Rossland News
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s Ministry of Forests will pump $28 million into 74 wildfire-prevention projects across all eight of the province’s natural resource regions, an investment applauded by NDP MLAs given its nearly $3-million investment in Kootenay communities. Through the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC), 43 new and expanded fibre-recovery projects and 31 new and expanded wildfire-mitigation projects will receive the funding, with all 74 projects expected to be complete by end of March. …In the Kootenay natural resource region, some $2,854,000 is supporting seven projects. These include $1.6 million for Nk’Mip Forestry in Castlegar; $593,000 for the Slocan Integral Foresty Cooperative; $396,000 and $46,500 for the Nakusp and Area Community Forest in Nakusp and New Denver, respectively; $101,000 for the Harrop-Procter Community Co-operative; $96,500 for the West Kootenay Woodlot Association in Nelson; and $21,000 for the Creston Valley Forest Corporation.

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Evans Lake Forest Education Society Online Auction

By Brad Techy
Evans Lake Forest Education Society
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Evans Lake Forest Education Society’s online silent auction starts Wednesday, March 5th at 12:00 pm and runs until Sunday, March 9th at 7:00pm.  We are raising money for our Campership Program to send underprivileged children and youth to our camp!  This gives them a positive experience in their lives that they will carry into adulthood. There are 65 great items to bid on from our fantastic donors.  The items represent one for every year that the society has existed starting back in 1960! You can view all of the great items on our auction link. If you would like to bid on any of them, please register as a participant.  All we need is your name and an email address to get a hold of you should you be the successful bidder!

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Trump administration ordered to reinstate thousands of fired USDA workers

By Josh Gerstein
Politico
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Thousands of fired workers at the Department of Agriculture must get their jobs back for at least the next month and a half, the chair of a federal civil service board ruled Wednesday. The ruling said the recent dismissals of more than 5,600 probationary employees may have violated federal laws and procedures for carrying out layoffs. The decision from Cathy Harris, the chair of the Merit Systems Protection Board, is a blow to the Trump administration’s effort to drastically and quickly shrink the federal bureaucracy. Though it applies only to the USDA, it could lay the groundwork for further rulings reinstating tens of thousands of other probationary workers whom the Trump administration has fired en masse across the government. But it’s far from a final resolution of the legality of the mass terminations. 

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Trump orders call to expand timber production. What does it mean for Oregon?

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Trump administration’s executive orders calling for the “immediate expansion” of timber production on federal lands appear poised to kick off a new chapter in how Oregon’s vast forests are managed — but what that will actually look like remains to be seen. Trump issued two executive orders last Saturday: the first to boost timber production and the second to address wood product imports. …The order gives public lands agencies 30 days to issue guidance on ways to increase timber production, reduce delivery times and “decrease timber supply uncertainty.” Timber groups back Trump’s plan, environmental groups call it ‘reckless’. …Timber groups and rural lawmakers said that in addition to increased harvests of board feet, the orders could help manage overstocked forests and reduce the threat of wildfire. …The threat of lawsuits, and how the orders will be implemented, weighted heavy on the mind of Oregon’s sole Republican member of Congress.

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Dakota College at Bottineau professor awarded for education impact

Minot Daily News
March 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Angela Bartholomay

BOTTINEAU – Angela Bartholomay, an associate professor of Science at Dakota College at Bottineau, is the recipient of the 2025 Project Learning Tree (PLT) Leadership in Education award. Bartholomay has been honored for her work promoting environmental stewardship through education for more than 30 years, according to a DCB news release. PLT, an initiative of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), is an award-winning education program that advances environmental awareness, forest literacy and green career pathways, using trees and forests as windows on the world. The Leadership in Education award recognizes educators who make significant contributions in their state to PLT and youth environmental education. …Bartholomay, along with Butch Bailey, a forester and instructor for Mississippi State University Extension Service, and Susan Cox, Conservation Education coordinator for the USDA Forest Service, Eastern Region, will be honored at the 2025 PLT Annual Conference in Clemson, South Carolina, from March 10-14.

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Lawmakers, loggers long for Trump-driven revival of Wyoming’s dying timber industry

By Mike Koshmrl
The Wyoming Tribune Eagle
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

CHEYENNE, Wyoming — Rep. John Eklund thought back a half century, to an era when commercial sawmills processing Wyoming timber abounded and logging was the Equality State’s third-largest industry. “We should be able to get back to that,” the Cheyenne Republican said Tuesday morning in the Wyoming Capitol. …Commercial logging in national forests around the country, including Wyoming, has fallen off dramatically from its heyday. Cut and sold timber has stagnated at a fraction of what it was from the 1950s through the 1980s for three decades running, U.S. Department of Agriculture data shows. …Trump’s order isn’t the only prospective policy change afoot that could revitalize commercially cutting American forests. The “Fix Our Forests Act,” has passed the U.S. House of Representatives and moved to the U.S. Senate. The bill, proving divisive in big commercial timber country, would further expedite environmental reviews — and could potentially have immediate impacts in Wyoming.

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New bill would cripple Alabama roads and bridges, endanger public safety

By Alabama Department of Transportation
Gulf Coast Media
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Legislation introduced by the Alabama Forestry Association would significantly worsen the condition of local and state roads and bridges, as well as hinder safety inspections of commercial vehicles. “The legislation is to allow significantly heavier axle weights to be hauled by large trucks — a move that is difficult to comprehend when the truckers already complain of sky-high liability insurance rates and serve as the primary target of advertising by personal injury law firms,” said Alabama Department of Transportation Deputy Director George Conner… “The math is simple: heavier truck axle weights are exceptionally dangerous and destroy roads and bridges; even heavier axle weights will be more dangerous and will destroy roads and bridges even more quickly.” …The Forestry Association’s proposal would increase the legal limit for a single axle from 20,000 pounds to 22,000 pounds while increasing the legal limit for two axles (tandem axles) from 34,000 pounds to 44,000 pounds.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Biomaterials: Industry will benefit from Scion fibre expertise

Innovatek
March 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

John Stulen

“News of recent paper mill closures and a log export slump may soon be replaced with more positive news logs and other forest resources”, says Rotorua-based forest technology specialist, John Stulen. “Scion has some excellent work streams completely focused on high value export products from across forest and fibre sector.” …Local scientists at Scion, are strongly represented in key biomaterial research focused on developing new sustainable products. For example a new effort – an international research programme, UPWEARS, aims to develop a sustainable e-textile (electrically-conductive textile) using cork, hemp, flax and paper byproducts, and develop ways to recycle and reuse textile waste. The overall aim is to contribute to a sustainable economy by unlocking the potential of bio-based and hybrid fabrics. …Another is a key technology startup collaboration between Scion and the New Zealand Product Accelerator. This will see a new forestry biofactory built in Rotorua soon.

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