Daily News for March 26, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

Iran conflict drives fuel and freight costs higher, squeezing global forest sector supply chains

The Tree Frog Forestry News
March 26, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The Iran conflict is driving fuel and freight costs higher, squeezing global forest sector supply chains. In other Business news: a retired New Brunswick judge says only one of the two recent court rulings on the boundaries of Aboriginal title applies precedent; GreenFirst reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $32.8 million; and the US sets 3.67% preliminary duty on dissolving pulp from Brazil. Meanwhile: BC Forests Minister Ravi Parmar is speaking at COFI’s 2026 convention; and the latest newsletter from BC Wood.

In Forestry/Climate news: Drax’s feedstock-switch away from BC won’t reduce GHGs; cuts to BC’s Climate Action Secretariat are questioned; USDA supports a California biomass gasification project; Michigan’s 2025 ice storm fallout upends forestry; Oregon purchased a plane with AI-enabled wildfire detection technology; and US Forest Chief Tom Schultz touts cuts to red tape, while a Colorado Congressman wants answers on forest hiring.

Finally, a conversation on the future of forestry in BC with Dallas Smith and Shannon Janzen.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Clarity in Canadian law of Aboriginal title is not optional

By Joesph Roberson, retired judge of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal
The Globe and Mail
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The BC Supreme Court’s decision in Cowichan v. Canada has drawn national attention. For the first time, a Canadian court has granted a declaration of Aboriginal title over privately owned lands. …But at the same time, the New Brunswick Court of Appeal in J.D. Irving v. Wolastoqey Nation ruled that the private lands held by timber companies were not subject to declarations of Aboriginal title. …We need to understand each ruling to understand the trajectory of Canadian law’s engagement with reconciliation. It’s clear that the rulings in fact point in just one direction, because Cowichan can be sustained only by rewriting the Supreme Court’s settled doctrine of Aboriginal title, while Wolastoqey, with one severable modification, remains faithful to it. Of the two decisions, only Wolastoqey offers an approach that is legally sound and clear in its application. …Wolastoqey demonstrates that proven wrongs can be addressed through compensation and negotiation without unsettling land titles or distorting the doctrine of Aboriginal title; Cowichan does the opposite. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Rethinking Forest Management: A Conversation on the Future of Forestry in B.C. with Shannon Janzen

By Rez Dog Walkers
YouTube
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Join Dallas Smith in this episode of the Rez Dog Walkers Podcast as he sits down with Shannon Janzen, former Vice President at Western Forest Products and a key contributor to the recent independent report, From Conflict to Care: BC’s Forest Future, for a thoughtful conversation on the challenges and future of British Columbia’s forestry sector. Shannon shares her perspective on the structural barriers impacting the industry today. She also explores lessons learned from her work as a consultant supporting Indigenous communities in business development, highlighting the growing importance of collaboration between Nations and the opportunity to rethink forest management with respect to the unique challenges faced by different regions across B.C. Dallas and Shannon also explore the background and some of the key findings of the recent report, highlighting the need to find opportunities amidst the challenges and the importance of building trusting relationships as a prerequisite for certainty and sustainability.

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BC Forests Minister Parmar to speak at COFI 2026 convention

BC Council of Forest Industries
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

With just 13 days to go, anticipation is building for the COFI Convention 2026, taking place April 8–10 at the JW Marriott Parq in Vancouver—bringing together more than 600 leaders from industry, government, First Nations, and communities under the theme Forestry is a Solution. A featured session, The Path Forward: Building Resiliency for the Future, will see the Hon. Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests and Makenzie Leine, Deputy Minister of Forests in conversation with COFI President and CEO Kim Haakstad. Against a backdrop of fibre supply pressures and shifting global markets, the discussion will explore both immediate actions and long-term strategies to restore predictability, strengthen competitiveness, and position BC as a global leader in sustainable forestry. With keynotes, panels, and networking opportunities across the supply chain, registration remains open for what is set to be Western Canada’s largest forest sector gathering.

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Preliminary Determination in the Countervailing Duty Investigation of High Purity Dissolving Pulp from Brazil

The Federal Register
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

On March 20, 2026, the U.S. Department of Commerce (Commerce) announced its preliminary affirmative determination in the countervailing duty (CVD) investigation of high purity dissolving pulp from Brazil. Commerce’s preliminarily determined that countervailable subsidies are being provided to producers and exporters of high purity dissolving pulp (dissolving pulp) from Brazil. The period of investigation is January 1, 2024, through December 31, 2024. Interested parties are invited to comment on this preliminary determination. …Commerce preliminarily determines that the following countervailable subsidy rates exist: Company Bracell Bahia Specialty Cellulose S.A. 3.67%, All Others 3.56%. …The final determination for the CVD investigation has been aligned with the concurrent antidumping duty investigation of high purity dissolving pulp from Brazil and Norway, and therefore, is scheduled to be announced on August 4, 2026, unless postponed. The U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) is conducting a concurrent injury investigation.  

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Hormuz Sealed, Costs Climbing — Swedish Timber Exports Cornered on Two Fronts

Jason Ross
Wood Central Australia
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Rising bunker prices are now hitting Swedish sawmill exporters on every trade lane, with the Strait of Hormuz closure driving up costs across routes and cutting off Middle East volumes, with no end in sight. That is according to Setra Group’s Olle Berg, Executive Vice President of market and business development at one of Sweden’s largest processors, who exports sawn timber, glulam, CLT, and structural components to Europe, North America, Asia, North Africa, and the Middle East. And according to Berg, the damage was coming through on two fronts – one from high oil prices now feeding into bunker costs regardless of destination, and the other from direct shipments to the Middle East, with container prices, surcharges and risk premiums climbing exponentially. “For Swedish sawmills, the volumes to the area are relatively small — but not insignificant,” Berg told a Timber Exchange webinar focused on the impact of the conflict on global sawmilling. 

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The New Zealand Forest Owners Association announces new leadership

New Zealand Forest Owners Association
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

The New Zealand Forest Owners Association (NZFOA) has announced new leadership following its Annual General Meeting on 19 March, with Dean Witehira elected as President – succeeding outgoing President, Matt Wakelin – and Sean McBride elected as Vice President. Currently chief operating officer at Kaingaroa Tipu, Dean holds more than 35 years’ expertise across the entire forest value chain. He has played a key role in managing one of the country’s largest forestry estates in the central North Island and is widely recognised for his leadership in large-scale forest operations, investment systems and high-risk operational environments. Forestry is at the heart of New Zealand’s economic and environmental future. While our forests already deliver jobs, support regional communities and provide climate solutions, Dean says there is still more we can do.

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Finance & Economics

GreenFirst reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $32.8 million

By GreenFirst Forest Products
Businesswire
March 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the fourth quarter of 2025. The Q4 2025 net loss from continuing operations was $32.8 million, compared to net loss of $57.4 million in Q3 2025. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations for Q4 2025 was negative $21.7 million compared to negative $47.2 million in Q3 2025. Benchmark prices saw decreases during the quarter which resulted in an average realized lumber prices of $654/mfbm for Q4 2025 which was lower than the $695/mfbm pricing realized in Q3 2025. Net sales were $76.9 million in Q4 2025, an increase of approximately 10% compared to Q3 2025. The increase in net sales was primarily driven by higher shipments, partially offset by lower realized pricing during the quarter. …The installation of the new large log line at our Chapleau mill temporarily impacted production volumes. 

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Fuel crisis: Higher diesel, shipping costs pile pressure on logging industry

By Radio New Zealand
The Country
March 25, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — The logging industry is warning that some companies could be on the brink as the conflict in Iran pushes up the cost of diesel. Logging operators say it’s increasingly difficult to get logs to port and if the situation drags on, export-reliant regions like South Canterbury and the west coast of the North Island could face shutdowns. The costs of shipping have risen dramatically, with rates going from roughly US$33 ($56) per cubic metre into China for March, through to about US$45 in April. Forest Management group director Glenn Moir said that would put some companies on the brink. “I can see that if it does continue, we’re going to face some real pressure in the higher-cost forests – so the ones that are further away from the market and have steeper country – just to make it economic.” There had been some huge cost pressures going through the chain.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Wood Connections – News for BC’s Wood Products Industry

The BC Wood Specialties Group
March 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The latest Wood Connections from BC Wood highlights a busy spring season of market development, training, and international outreach for BC’s value-added wood sector. Alongside updates on trade missions and global market engagement, the association is also entering a period of transition, with a search underway for a new CEO to help guide BC Wood’s next chapter and continued growth. This issue also encourages members to save the date for the upcoming Global Buyers Mission, the sector’s flagship international event connecting BC manufacturers with buyers from around the world and showcasing the province’s innovation in wood design and construction. Additional highlights include workforce development initiatives and specialized training programs aimed at strengthening manufacturing capacity, as well as member updates that showcase leadership and success across the value-added sector. Together, these efforts reinforce BC Wood’s focus on market diversification, skills development, and building a strong, competitive industry in British Columbia.

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Forestry

Salmon Arm council supports keeping focus on forest fuel mitigation

By Lachlan Labere
The Salmon Arm Observer
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wildfire fuel mitigation will remain a priority for the city, despite the B.C. government’s plans to stem the flow of FireSmart funding. At its March 23 meeting, city council received a presentation by Assistant Fire Chief Carmen Guidos, who was seeking direction on a couple of matters. One had to do with the Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan (CWRP) currently under development. The other was in regard of fuel mitigation work already planned for Coyote Park, South Canoe, and a small treatment area on Mt. Ida. The connecting thread prompting Guidos’ presentation was recent changes by the BC government to how it funds community FireSmart initiatives. The province introduced the FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FSCFS) programs in 2018, providing approximately $175 million since then for communities to hire coordinators, conduct education campaigns and pay for fuel management efforts.

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Recovery of errant log bundles continues in Parksville area

Parksville Qualicum Beach News
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Recovery operations are ongoing after 19 log bundles ended up on beaches in the PQB area after rough weather caused a log boom to break open at Mosaic Forest Management’s Northwest Bay waterfront facility two weekends ago. Mosaic said more than half of the bundles have been retrieved, but crews need favourable tides and calm weather to safely recover the remaining logs. “We’re hoping to have suitable conditions in the next few days to complete the recovery as quickly and safely as possible,” Mosaic told the PQB News on March 24. Mosaic notified the provincial regulator and is in direct contact with Rathtrevor Provincial Park representatives about its plans and timeline. The province has declared the area where the logs went astray as a “closed area in so far as the marine salvage of logs is concerned”. END

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Cutting red tape: A new era of simpler, smarter Forest Service policy

By Tom Schultz
US Department of Agriculture
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

For too long, the Forest Service has been bogged down by excessive processes that hamper innovation. I want every employee to focus on actions that roll back this red tape. Doing so ensures critical projects are easier and faster to accomplish. I believe that the people closest to the ground know the forest best, and we should listen to what they have to say. As I stated in my FY26 priorities, deregulation is a top priority for our agency. Most would agree that our directives are overly complicated, lengthy and outdated. At my direction, the Forest Service Policy Office has developed and begun implementing a “Directives Modernization” strategy. This strategy will streamline and simplify our directives and return discretion to decision-makers in the field. This effort involves restructuring the Directives System and clarifying the purposes of its two components, the Forest Service Manual and Handbooks. 

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Idaho forest land near Mount Spokane protected from development

By Michael Wright
The Spokesman-Review
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A large chunk of private forest land near Mount Spokane is now permanently protected from development. The Idaho Department of Lands announced Wednesday that more than 22,000 acres of Inland Empire Paper Co. is now protected under a conservation easement. Inland Empire is owned by the Cowles Co., which also owns The Spokesman-Review. The property is between Mount Spokane and Spirit Lake in Bonner and Kootenai counties. …It includes habitat for a variety of wildlife, such as elk, deer and westslope cutthroat trout, according to a Department of Lands news release. It also covers part of the Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer, which provides drinking water for people in Spokane and Kootenai counties. The deal locks in public access for the property, which has long been used by hunters, hikers, berry pickers and other recreationists.

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Oregon Department of Forestry Scores Futuristic Wildfire Detection Airplane

By Peter Madsen
The Bend Source
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Oregon Department of Forestry will be stationing a new, multi-mission airplane, equipped with technology out of a sci-fi movie, in Prineville — just in time for fire season. The Twin Otter, which some appreciators refer to as a “Twotter,” will relieve ODF’s Partenavia P.68 Observer airplane, which will be retired after more than three decades of use. Manufactured by de Havilland Canada, the Twin Otter was originally introduced in 1966 and is valued for its short takeoff and landing abilities and stable flight at slow speeds, which make the plane ideal for low-level surveys and data collection, according to the manufacturer. The Twin Otter comes with a $7.8 million price tag, yet its state-of-the-art sensing technology, which tacked on an extra $5.4 million, is what makes the plane a multi-mission aircraft. The plane will be kitted with AI-enabled, wide-area and augmented-reality mapping abilities, along with high-definition thermal imaging and night vision capabilities. 

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Colorado Congressman wants answers about U.S. Forest Service seasonal hiring after last year’s staffing cuts, hiring freeze

By Ryan Spencer
Sky-Hi News
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

After firing about 3,400 employees nationwide and instituting a seasonal hiring freeze last year, the U.S. Forest Service is planning to hire 2,000 seasonal workers this year. A Colorado lawmaker wants more information about the U.S. Forest Service’s plans to hire seasonal staff again this summer, after the agency cut thousands of positions and did not employ seasonal help last year. U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse, whose district includes Eagle, Grand, Jackson, Routt and Summit counties, penned a letter to Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz earlier this month describing the impact that massive cuts to staffing have had on the agency and the importance of seasonal workers. Rep. Jared Huffman, D-California, also joined the letter. “As you know, seasonal employees play a critical role in the maintenance and stewardship of some of our most treasured public lands and national forests,” Neguse wrote, noting that more than 130 million people visit the country’s national forests annually.

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‘It’s going to take 100 years’: Ice storm fallout reshapes Northern Michigan forests

By Sheri McWhirter
Michigan Live
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

MICHIGAN — A disastrous ice storm last spring gut-punched Michigan’s multi-billion-dollar forestry sector. One year later, experts say the damage from that storm – which coated and snapped trees with up to an inch of ice accumulation across millions of acres of Northern Michigan forests – will ripple through timber markets for decades. The March 28-30, 2025, storm wiped out years of future logging contracts and reshaped forestry plans across the heart of the state’s “wood basket.” “It’s going to take 100 years to get this sorted out,” said Dan Heckman, forestry planning and modeling specialist for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. The storm was so disruptive to existing logging plans that the state had to recalibrate its latest 10-year forest management plan. Northern Michigan’s red pine plantations and aspen stands took the brunt of the damage. Public and private foresters have spent the past year trying to salvage what financial value they can. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

BC Cuts Climate Agency, Sends Some Staff to Work on Pipelines

By Zoe Yunker
The Tyee
March 25, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC has quietly eliminated its Climate Action Secretariat, the long-running agency that produced and implemented climate policy across government ministries. In an email to staff, Peter Pokorny, deputy minister of energy and climate solutions, said that “to align with key priorities” some secretariat staff would move to new subject matter, including supporting LNG, pipelines and gas fracking. …Other staff will be moved to a newly formed “climate solutions” division, which will also bring in staff from the now-folded “energy decarbonization division.” The new division will focus on some of the secretariat’s previous responsibilities, including emissions accounting and efforts to reduce emissions in sectors like buildings, transportation and industry. …Stand.earth, described the move as part of the “slow-motion death” of the province’s climate plan, CleanBC. …The Ministry of Energy and Climate Solutions pushed back on the idea that it had eliminated the secretariat, instead referring to the cuts as a “reconfiguration.”

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Why Humans Still Burn Logs for Power

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
March 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Drax, the U.K. company that operates the world’s largest wood-fired power plant, recently made headlines when it said that it will stop using trees cut down in Canada as part of its feedstock. But the move, which has been hailed by some in the environmental community as a huge milestone, won’t make an iota of difference on the ground in Canada — or anywhere else for that matter. That’s because Drax is both a major consumer and producer of wood pellets, which are burned like coal, natural gas and oil in thermal power plants around the world to produce electricity. …The company will shift to sourcing those pellets from elsewhere. …One consequential but almost completely ignored aspect of the Drax story is that “switching” from coal to wood hasn’t made so much as a dent in global demand for coal — or greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, worldwide use of both wood and coal continues to rise.

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USDA Approves $25 Million Loan Guarantee For Biomass Gasification Project In California

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
March 24, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The USDA on March 23 announced it will provide a $25 million loan guarantee under the Rural Development Timber Production Expansion Program to support a 3-megawatt (MW) biomass gasification project in California under development by Blue Mountain Electric Co. The loan guarantee will be used to finance a 3 MW gasification plant that will convert forestry biomass waste into synthetic natural gas through the process of thermochemical conversion. The total project cost is estimated at $42.2 million. According to USDA, the loan guarantee will support construction of the facility and provide working capital for operating expenses during the first year. In its announcement, the USDA also indicated there is a pending grant application for the project that has already been approved by the Efficiency Team. The agency said the guaranteed loan package had not been submitted at that time.

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Health & Safety

Paul Harris Jones passed away peacefully at 97

The Sunshine Coast Reporter
March 26, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Paul Jones

Paul Harris Jones passed away peacefully at home on February 28th, 2026 at age 97. …He emigrated to Canada in 1948. He attended UBC in Vancouver, completing a BSc in Forestry and meeting Mavis Ruth Jones of Cranberry Lake, who he married. They subsequently went to live in England where Paul completed a Graduate Diploma in Forestry Economics at Oxford. …In 1967, Paul left work in the Canadian Forestry sector and accepted an overseas posting with the Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations. He lived with his family in Turkey for five years and completed an assignment as assistant director, then opened his own consulting firm and worked around the globe as a forestry economist until his retirement in 1989. 

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