Daily News for November 06, 2024

Today’s Takeaway

Trump’s return to White House raises trade concerns for lumber and Canada as a whole

The Tree Frog Forestry News
November 6, 2024
Category: Today's Takeaway

Trump’s impending return to the White House raises trade concerns for lumber and Canada as a whole. In related news: COFI’s Michael Armstrong urges action on BC port strikes; Nelson Bennett says business prefers NDP without Greens; and the Global Wood Summit highlights market challenges, and forecasts strong lumber prices for 2025. Meanwhile: Interfor secures a tax refund in Washington; BlueLinx expands to Portland Oregon; and RayOMartin celebrates its OSB expansion in Texas.

In other news: an Oregon court dismisses school district case over timber revenues; US Forest Service partners with the Nature Conservancy; flawed data said to undermine Swedish forest policies; EU Deforestation Regulations trouble book manufacturers; and mass timber makes headway in Vancouver, and Toronto; and Eugene, Oregon.

Finally, a plastic -free packaging solution for wine that marries FSC paper with aluminum.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News

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Special Feature

Global Wood Summit Highlights: Conference Predicts Strong US Lumber Prices for 2025!

By Russ Taylor, Kevin Mason and Kelly McCloskey
Tree Frog Forestry News
November 6, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States

The Global Wood Summit – held last week in Vancouver, BC – provided an excellent platform for discussions and perspectives on what can be expected in 2025 for the North American and global forest products markets. Amongst all the topics, the outlook for the three key market regions in Asia (China and Japan), Europe, and the US were discussed at length, where the consensus was weakest in Asia, moderate in Europe, with potential upside expected for the US market. It is expected that the US will lead all markets in 2025 and prices should be higher – maybe very high according to some! Conference Proceedings from 20 presenters are available for sale at US$400. Please contact Russ Taylor directly or go to the Global Wood Summit website where you can purchase the proceedings starting on November 12.

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Business & Politics

Trump Sweep Creates New Fight for Trudeau as Trade Talks Loom

By Randy Thanthong-Knight
Bloomberg News in the Financial Post
November 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The country that buys more US goods than any other and is its largest external oil supplier is bracing for economic disruption now that voters have returned Donald Trump to the White House. Canada’s economy depends on its ability to sell energy, cars, minerals and other goods to the US. …The two countries have one of the world’s largest bilateral trading relationships, worth about $2.6 billion in goods and services daily, similar in size to US-Mexico trade flows. Trump’s promise of across-the-board tariffs on everything the US imports will rattle the entire region. …The odds of a recession in Canada will rise, according to economists at Desjardins, a Quebec-based financial group. …US moves to limit the flow of Canadian softwood lumber are a point of trade friction that goes back decades. The US hiked import duties on Canadian softwood lumber by almost 81% in August, the latest move in a simmering four-decade disagreement. 

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How Trump’s Proposed Import Tariffs Could Hit Canadian Industries: Auto, Lumber, and Tech at Risk

By James Murray
The Net News Ledger
November 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

THUNDER BAY, Ontario – With President-Elect Donald Trump’s pledge to impose tariffs on all U.S. imports, Canadian industries face significant uncertainties that could have ripple effects on jobs, exports, and economic growth. For Thunder Bay and Northwestern Ontario, sectors like auto parts, softwood lumber, mining, and technology may see increased costs, lower demand, and supply chain disruptions. …Trump’s proposed tariffs add fresh uncertainty to an already strained relationship. The tariffs could heighten lumber costs, adding to the pressure on Northwestern Ontario’s forestry sector—a major local employer. …The region’s timber producers could see higher export costs to the U.S., making Canadian softwood less appealing in a competitive American market. …The Canadian government may have to intervene to support the lumber industry, likely by exploring new markets beyond the U.S. or offering subsidies to affected businesses. However, this process would take time, leaving Northwestern Ontario’s lumber sector in a vulnerable position.

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’Buckle up’ for a second Trump presidency, former U.S. ambassador tells Canada

Radio Canada International
November 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Kelly Craft

‘We will be the best friend you’ve ever had if you get your house in order,’ former envoy says to Canada Kelly Craft, Donald Trump’s former ambassador to Canada, says the country should prepare for what could be a more antagonistic bilateral relationship with the U.S. Trump’s focus on building up American manufacturing and making NATO allies spend more on defence means Canada would need to make some policy changes to stay in America’s good graces, Craft said. …While there has been some squabbling over the longstanding softwood lumber dispute… the Canada-U.S. relationship has been relatively harmonious with Biden in office. …A Trump victory gives Canadians pause, it gives Canadians reason for concern. We have a pretty good idea of where the Trump team will be going on issues affecting Canada and none of them are very good, she said.

Related coverage by Andrew Erskine in the Vancouver Sun: Making Canada’s relationship indispensable to the U.S. will require help from the provinces 

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Pickets up at Nanaimo port, Duke Point; dispute could hurt forestry operations

By Carla Wilson and Chuck Chiang
Victoria Times Colonist
November 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A lockout of longshoremen could affect Vancouver Island ports serving forestry operations and taking delivery of cargo from container ships, including new vehicles arriving at the Nanaimo port, says the B.C. Maritime Employers Association. As of Monday, about 20 members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 were affected by the lockout in Nanaimo and at Duke Point, along with about 70 in Prince Rupert and hundreds more in Metro Vancouver, the union said. Ian Marr, president and chief executive of the Port of Nanaimo, which has a large vehicle processing centre, said pickets are up at the port’s downtown location and at Duke Point. The Seaspan Garibaldi is waiting at the downtown port and another vessel that arrived to pick up logs is also there, he said. “It did load some logs in the last few days but hasn’t completed [the work].” 

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Port of Prince Rupert Operational Update

The Prince Rupert Port Authority
November 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Port of Prince Rupert is experiencing disruptions following the issuing of a 72-hour strike notice by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Ship & Dock Foremen Local 514 (ILWU Local 514) and the subsequent 72-hour lockout notice issued by the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA). The Prince Rupert Port Authority encourages both groups to reach an agreement rapidly. Canada’s west coast trade … depends on quickly reaching a resolution that keeps goods moving through its ports. The Port of Prince Rupert has built a global reputation as a reliable North American port and a strategic gateway for trade. Maintaining the trust and confidence of shippers is critical to our competitive advantage. Two out of seven terminals at the Port of Prince Rupert will be directly impacted – Fairview Container Terminal operated by DP World and Westview Wood Pellet Terminal operated by Drax Group. 

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BC Council of Forest Industries Statement on the disruptions at West Coast ports

By Michael Armstrong, Vice President & Chief Forester
Council of Forest Industries
November 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Michael Armstrong

Vancouver, B.C. – Michael Armstrong, Vice President & Chief Forester of the BC Council of Forest Industries, issued a statement regarding the closure of B.C. ports: “With the disruptions to operations at West Coast ports, the BC Council of Forest Industries urges all parties – employers, unions, and both provincial and federal governments – to urgently collaborate on a swift resolution. These ports are an essential channel for British Columbia’s forestry sector … playing an indispensable role in global supply chains. With over $11 billion in exports in 2023, forest products account for nearly one-quarter of the province’s merchandise exports. Each day of disruption compounds delays, impacts business continuity and the livelihoods of workers and communities that depend on forestry.” …“Ensuring that B.C.’s exports reach customers promptly is essential for the health of the province’s economy. We urge swift action from all stakeholders to mitigate the impacts a prolonged disruption could have on jobs, local economies, and our sector’s stability.”

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Status quo better than NDP minority, say B.C. business leaders

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
November 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A second-term David Eby BC NDP government is “marginally better” than the alternative that appeared to be in the cards on election night, business leaders said last week. …In an open letter to the new government, seven business associations… urged the new government to take B.C.’s flagging economic health seriously, and get its fiscal house in order. …At last week’s Global Wood Summit, Rob Schuetz, president of Industrial Forestry Services, said 16 sawmills, three pulp mills and four paper mills have been shut down in B.C. since 2020. He gave a laundry list of NDP government policies that have reduced access to timber and increased costs and bureaucracy. …Don McGregor, VP for Western Forest Products, summed up a sentiment that may be shared by the wider resource business community. “If it sticks, the NDP have a majority and they don’t need the Green Party,” he said. “I would take that as a positive.”

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B.C. forest sector prognosis becoming progressively grim

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
November 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rob Schuetz

With North American lumber prices below break-even costs for many sawmills in Canada and the U.S., plus ongoing geopolitical uncertainty, recessionary conditions in China and declining timber supplies around the world, the global outlook for the forestry industry is not particularly rosy. In British Columbia, once North America’s forest-sector powerhouse, it seems downright dismal. And low lumber prices—a result of inflation and high interest rates squelching North American homebuilding—are only one of a myriad of challenges facing the industry. …A shrinking timber supply has turned B.C. into a high-cost jurisdiction. …In short, B.C. has an allowable annual cut that is increasingly not allowed to be cut. …Since the BC NDP came to power in 2017, the percentage of the AAC that is actually cut has fallen below 50 per cent, Rob Schuetz, president of Industrial Forest Services, said. …Even if lumber prices recover, Schuetz suggested B.C. producers will be in no position to capitalize on them.

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BlueLinx Opens New Greenfield Distribution Center in Portland, Oregon

By BlueLinx Holdings Inc.
Business Wire
November 4, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

ATLANTA — BlueLinx announced the opening of a new greenfield distribution center in Portland, Oregon. This strategic opening in the Pacific Northwest expands BlueLinx’s geographic presence in a vital growth region. …“Our new Portland distribution center reflects our commitment to expanding our geographic footprint through greenfield distribution centers,” said Shyam Reddy, CEO of BlueLinx. “This strategically positioned operation will help us meet increasing demand in the Pacific Northwest.” …This new branch in Portland, Oregon will distribute a range of specialty products and complementary structural products. The distribution center will also complement BlueLinx’s prior acquisition and integration of Vandermeer Forest Products in October 2022.

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Clallam County refunding lumber company due to assessment dispute

By Emma Maple
Peninsula Daily News
November 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

PORT ANGELES — Clallam County is refunding Interfor U.S., Inc., about $240,000 after the company challenged its assessed property valuations for 2021-2023. While the county is writing the check, Administrator Todd Mielke said each of the taxing districts which have already collected their portion of Interfor’s payments will have to pay the county back. That likely will happen in the form of deductions from future property tax income, he said. In 2021, 2022 and 2023, Interfor, a lumber company that owns a saw mill in Port Angeles, challenged the county’s property assessments of $67.5 million, $58.7 million and $61.7 million, respectively, for its 18.53-acre property located at 243701 U.S. Highway 101. The 2021 challenge was set to go before the state Board of Tax Appeals (BTA) in December, Mielke said. Before that occurred, however, Interfor requested a mediation session between the company and the county.

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RoyOMartin celebrates expansion of Corrigan OSB in Texas

By RayOMartin
The LBM Journal
November 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

TEXAS — RoyOMartin celebrated the grand opening of the expansion of Corrigan OSB, our Texas subsidiary. This enlargement makes the company’s oriented strand board manufacturing facility the largest of its kind in North America. …The ceremony drew more than 200 attendees, including company partners, community leaders, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. A tour of the new production line was available for interested guests. Constructed next to the company’s original state-of-the-art OSB plant, the new expansion is located in Corrigan between Lufkin and Livingston, TX. The second facility significantly increases the mill’s size and production capacity to 1,400 MMSF (million square feet) annually and provides a total of 300 jobs at the mill. 

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Timber industry leader calls for country of origin labeling on imported products

By Eddie Williams
ABC News, Australia
November 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Timber industry advocates are calling for extra scrutiny after a quarter of products tested in a verification trial were found to be “potentially misleading”. Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry acting director Madeleine Osborn said illegal logging was “one of the most profitable trans-border environmental crimes in the world”, with devastating impacts on climate, nature and people. “Between 15 and 30 per cent of all timber traded globally is potentially illegally logged, and 10 per cent potentially in the Australian market that’s illegally sourced,” she said. Under new laws, government officials can test some imported timber products to check species and country of origin. …A trial, which ended in June, tested more than 140 products and 39 distinct species. …Ms Osborn said about 25 per cent of products tested had inaccurate species and origin claims. …”The information that [importers] are being provided by their overseas suppliers is potentially misleading.”

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Finance & Economics

Canada’s residential building construction rose .9% in Q3, 2024

Statistics Canada
November 5, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Residential building construction costs increased 0.9% in the third quarter, following a 1.0% increase in the previous quarter. Non-residential building construction costs rose 0.5% in the third quarter, following a 1.4% increase in the previous quarter. This marks the slowest quarterly growth since the second quarter of 2020 for residential building construction costs and since the fourth quarter of the same year for non-residential building construction costs. Year over year, construction costs for residential buildings rose 4.0% in the 15-CMA composite in the third quarter of 2024, while non-residential building construction costs increased 3.9%. Builders noted that the industry continued to face cost pressure from skilled labour shortages, land prices and availability, and building code changes.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Ryder and 3XN GXN selected for University of British Columbia housing project

Canadian Architect
November 5, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ryder Architecture, in partnership with 3XN GXN, has announced that they will provide architectural services for the University of British Columbia’s (UBC) Lower Mall Precinct Phase One project. The $560-million endeavour will deliver more than 1,500 new beds and significantly contribute to British Columbia’s remaining target of roughly 6,700 new student housing beds by 2028. The Lower Mall Precinct Phase One project will encompass five buildings, and total 710,000 square feet. It will include an 18-storey tower, an eight-storey mass timber hybrid prototype structure, and the adaptive reuse of a historic fire hall. …“By integrating mass timber technologies and adhering to CleanBC initiatives, we are committed to advancing UBC’s sustainability goals,” said Adam James, principal at Ryder Architecture. “Our team, supported by 3XN GXN’s research-driven studio, pioneers strategic sustainability within the construction industry.”

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Toronto is getting a generation of stunning new buildings made entirely out of wood

By Jack Landau
BigTO
November 5, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Toronto’s towering structures of steel and concrete are getting some new company in an old-fashioned building medium reborn in an innovative new form. …Unlike the untreated wood of yesteryear, modern wood construction uses a treated form of the material known as mass timber, which uses several layers of wood bonded together and laminated to create structural elements with load-bearing and fire resistance ratings that far exceed the performance of standard wood. Recent changes to the Ontario Building Code have allowed developers to utilize this innovative building medium to push the boundaries of sustainable construction, resulting in a wave of new large-scale wood-framed structures in Toronto. A pair of mass-timber buildings now stand as showpieces in one of Toronto’s newest neighbourhoods, and is just an appetizer for even more ambitious wood towers in the pipeline.

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A University of Oregon prototype home features green, innovative construction using Oregon-made mass plywood panels

KTVZ TV
November 4, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

EUGENE, Oregon — A University of Oregon research and design team has completed construction on a prototype house that showcases a sustainable, energy-efficient alternative to traditional home construction. Researchers with the TallWood Design Institute, a collaboration of the UO and Oregon State University, spent two years designing and building the 760-square-foot house made from mass plywood panels manufactured in Oregon by Freres Engineered Wood. The institute will welcome visitors to an open house Nov. 7 showcasing the project. …The test home demonstrates a new construction model that could help with housing shortages, the economy and wildfire mitigation, said Judith Sheine, a UO professor of architecture. …This first prototype marks a big step forward, Sheine said. The model home could represent a new solution to help address Oregon’s housing crisis, especially affordable options known as middle or workforce housing.

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Company unveils new wine bottle that could change the alcohol industry

By Susan Turek
Yahoo! News
November 5, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Crealis Group has unveiled a plastic-free packaging solution for sparkling wine that promises to reduce carbon pollution — potentially protecting the future of the celebratory drink, along with other popular food and beverages threatened by the effects of rising global temperatures. Dubbed “Symbiosis,” the packaging marries FSC-certified paper with aluminum. According to the company, forgoing plastic “ensures a CO2 reduction of 30%” compared to foil sealers that incorporate the material, generally made from dirty fuels primarily to blame for a warming climate associated with more intense extreme weather events like crop-destroying droughts. Furthermore, the customizable packaging is easily recyclable. Packaging Europe reported that Symbiosis is able to enter paper waste streams under the European Recycling Code C/PAP82. Compare that to plastic recycling programs, which have come under scrutiny in recent years.

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Forestry

The Alex Fraser Research Forest is seeking an interim manager! Come and manage the team!

UBC Faculty of Forestry
November 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Faculty of Forestry at the University of British Columbia (UBC) is seeking a dynamic and experienced leader to serve as the Interim Manager of the Alex Fraser Research Forest in Williams Lake, BC. This role offers a unique opportunity to manage a multi-faceted research and education facility while working in a vibrant community at the heart of British Columbia’s forestry sector. The Interim Manager will be responsible for the day-to-day management of the research forest, overseeing its operations, and financial health. This includes leading a team of professionals, and managing crown land tenures. The role requires a strong combination of leadership, business acumen, and a passion for forestry education and research.

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Fred Talen wants to bring stability to Harrison Hot Springs

By Josh Kozelj
Fraser Valley Current in the Penticton Herald
November 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Fred Talen

Fred Talen planned to retire in Harrison Hot Springs with his wife. Now he’s the mayor. …A Rockwell Drive project aimed at improving the road for pedestrians, along with all emergency-related initiatives in the village, may be impacted by a report received on Oct. 21 from North Vancouver-based forestry consultant company, B.A. Blackwell & Associates, which emphasized the importance of establishing a secondary emergency route in the community. The report updated a community wildfire resilience plan implemented by the village in 2019. The Blackwell report revised the local wildfire threat to “low to moderate,” a change from its previous classification that had described the region as having a high threat for wildfires. …the downgrading of risk stems from a low likelihood of an out-of-control fire erupting in the community, according to the report. …Talen said the village will further investigate how it will impact future emergency response plans.

 

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Logging concerns Okeover resident

By Paul Galinski
Powell River Peak
November 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Crowther Road resident in the Okeover Inlet area has expressed concerns about logging operations by Mosaic Forest Management taking place in her neighbourhood. In correspondence to the Peak, Diane Moore stated that she was writing regarding activities of a large forestry company currently preparing to log in a residential area north of Powell River. “Mosaic Forest Management has begun logging road construction in the Okeover area, with logging to follow,” stated Moore. …Moore stated that danger to residents and road users resulting from ongoing logging activity is of paramount importance in the event of falling rocks or landslides, with potentially life-threatening consequences. …According to the FAQ section, the entire harvest area is second-growth forest and consists of several small harvest units. “Our professional foresters, biologists and engineers have designed the area taking into consideration safety, terrain, hydrology, visual quality, wildlife, fisheries and much more,” stated Mosaic.

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European Union Deforestation Regulations Updates Were a Hot Topic at the Book Manufacturers’ Institute’s Annual Meeting

By Jim Milliot
Publishers Weekly
November 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Book Manufacturers’ Institute’s (BMI) annual meeting was held on October 28 in Naples, Fla. BMI executive director Matt Baer was successful in his goal of not making the conference only about meeting the requirements of the European Union Deforestation Regulations, the objective of which is to mandate that only “deforestation-free” products, including books, can be sold in the European Economic Area. The topic was a major focus of earlier meetings, and took on a new life a couple days later when the European Commission approved a one-year delay in implementing the regulations, which were set to go into effect on December 31. The postponement was good news for U.S. printers and publishers, but Lisa Faratro, director of environment and sustainability at the U.K.-based CPI Group, and Jenna Mueller of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) both advised those in attendance that they should not slow down their efforts to comply with the regulations. 

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Oregon court dismisses case brought by school district against state over reduced timber revenue

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle in the Salem Reporter
November 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: US West, US East

OREGON — A circuit court judge in northwest Oregon dismissed a tiny school district’s case against the state over new limits on logging that could lead to reduced funding for the district. The Jewell School District, a single school serving 124 students in Clatsop County, funds its current $4.3 million budget entirely with timber revenue from state forest harvests. Clatsop County is one of 13 Forest Trust Land Counties that has, for about the last 80 years, gotten a kickback from timber harvests on state forests within the counties. District leaders argued that the Oregon Department of Forestry will cause it and the forestry department serious financial harm by allowing a habitat conservation plan to move forward that would reduce logging about 35% in the Clatsop State Forest. The Western Oregon State Forest Habitat Conservation Plan, approved in March, will scale back logging an average of 20%… to protect 17 threatened or endangered species.

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US Forest Service works with The Nature Conservancy on reforestation

By Kirsten Wisniewski
WTIP North Shore Community Radio
November 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

MINNESOTA — When The Nature Conservancy is part of a reforestation project, each member of their crew can plant 2000 to 3000 seedlings in a single day, according to Resilience Forester Laura Slavsky. Slavsky is based in Duluth and part of the team organizing reforestation projects following timber cutting in Superior National Forest. The reforestation projects are joint efforts that include TNC and the National Forest Service, along with input from other public entities like the bands of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe and city and county governments, and from other environmental groups. One such project is located just off the Sawbill Trail, North of Tofte. WTIP’s Kirsten Wisniewski spoke with Slavsky, Heruth, Grosshuesch, and Stover in the field. [Audio]

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Papua New Guinea plea for government action over large scale illegal logging

By Don Wiseman
Radio New Zealand News
November 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Civil society groups and community representatives from across Papua New Guinea have gathered in Port Moresby to demand government action on the widespread abuse of Forest Clearing Authorities (FCAs). More than one-third of all logs exported from PNG come from logging operations authorised under an FCA permit. These permits are meant to facilitate land clearance for agriculture or other land use changes, but the civil society groups and organisations like the Institute of National Affairs can point to a large body of evidence that they are being systematically abused to allow large-scale logging of huge tracts of forest. The environmental campaigners, Act Now!, say there are currently more than 20 FCA logging operations in eight provinces across PNG which are contributing to widespread illegal and unsustainable logging.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Flawed forestry data undermines effective policies

By Ulf Larsson, President and Chief Executive Officer, Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget
EUobserver
November 6, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Ulf Larsson

The volume of growing trees in Swedish forests has doubled over the last hundred years. There is a continuous increase in living biomass, and the state of Swedish forests as a sink for carbon has never been more important. The same goes for the use of wood-based products in displacing emission-intensive materials like concrete, plastic, and steel. The significance of timber and wood in the green transition of Europe is immense. And the potential is even bigger. This might come as a surprise for many following the debate in recent years. We have constantly been alerted about a state of emergency, where alleged aggressive forestry practises supposedly have led to massive deforestation and forest degradation in Europe in general and in the Nordics in particular. But the claim that there has been an abrupt increase in harvesting is not correct.

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