Daily News for September 27, 2023

Today’s Takeaway

Paper Excellence announces restart of Catalyst Crofton mill

The Tree Frog Forestry News
September 27, 2023
Category: Today's Takeaway

Paper Excellence announced the resumption of pulp operations at its Catalyst Crofton mill, but paper operations remain curtailed. In other Business news: two die in a helicopter crash involving forestry surveyors in Prince George; Microsoft signs a carbon capture deal for biochar; McDonald’s uses mass timber in Brazil, opens Lead Zero Carbon restaurant in Hong Kong; and Structurlam, LP, Boise and Tolko win APA Safety and Health Awards.

In Forestry/Climate news: FSC Canada launched a new standard for smaller forest holders; Arizona’s timber industry faces near collapse; Brazil declares emergency as drought hits Amazon forests; the Pacific Logging Congress features high-tech advancements; and ENGOs plan forestry protests in British Columbia and Oregon

Finally, state-of-the-art robotic dog employed by Drax UK will enhance safety.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog Editor

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Business & Politics

Paper Excellence Canada Announces Restart of Pulp Operations at Catalyst Crofton Mill

By Brenda Martin, Public Affairs Manager
Paper Excellence Canada
September 26, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Richmond, BC – Paper Excellence Canada is pleased to announce the resumption of kraft pulp operations at its Catalyst Crofton mill, bringing more than 300 workers back to their jobs. While market conditions allow for the restart of our pulp operations, the curtailment of paper operations at Crofton is being extended to the end of October. “In spite of challenges posed by exceptionally low pulp and paper prices driven by global market fluctuations, we are pleased to announce that we are resuming pulp production and reinstating a portion of our workforce at our Crofton mill. While this is a positive development, we will continue to assess the ongoing viability of maintaining Kraft pulp operations at Crofton to ensure it is cost effective to operate and consistent with our overall business strategies,” said Krista Cuddy, Catalyst Crofton, Interim Director – Operations & Integration.

Additional coverage in the Cowichan Valley Citizen: Pulp operations restarting but not paper production

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Finance & Economics

US Consumer Confidence Falls Again in September

By Fan-Yu Kuo
NAHB – Eye on Housing
September 26, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US consumer confidence saw another decline in September as consumers expressed growing concerns about the future, primarily driven by persistent inflation and expectations of higher interest rates lasting for an extended period. The Consumer Confidence Index, reported by the Conference Board, fell 5.7 points from 108.7 to 103.0 in September, the lowest level since May 2023. The Present Situation Index rose 0.4 points from 146.7 to 147.1, and the Expectation Situation Index decreased 9.6 points from 83.3 to 73.7. Historically, a reading below 80 often signals a recession within a year. …Consumers were less optimistic about the short-term outlook. …The share of respondents planning to buy a home declined to 4.9% in September. The share of respondents planning to buy a newly constructed home decreased to 0.4%, while for those who planning to buy an existing home slightly rose to 2.6%.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Re-opened Borders Bring B.C. Value-added Producers Rushing Back to the Japan Home & Building Show

By Kit Crowe
BC Forestry Innovation Investment
September 22, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Since BC Wood opened its Japan office several decades ago, national trade shows at Tokyo Big Sight have been the association’s main venue for bringing together Canadian suppliers with Japanese buyers. Many value-added manufacturers plan their sales trips and promotions around these shows and Japanese customers know that they can meet new suppliers in the Canadian pavilion. As a result, the COVID-19 border closures created a significant barrier to BC Wood’s marketing efforts in this key market. Despite border closures, the BC Wood Japan office continued to exhibit on behalf of Canadian industry at every national trade show, utilizing Zoom and other online tools to directly connect Canadian and Japanese companies. Entry restrictions were lifted in October 2022, just in time for the signature Japan Home & Building Show. After being away for almost three years, seven B.C. value-added manufacturers attended the event for the opportunity to reconnect with clients face-to-face. 

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Pacific HemFir Timbers Stand Out in High Sierra Residential Architecture

Pacific HemFir
September 25, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Frank Lloyd Wright was a stylistic inspiration for a unique pentagon-shaped timber frame residence in the High Sierra’s. Architect Kenneth Avery and lead architect Joel Barkley of Ike Baker Velten led this custom project. They had a vision to build a unique home that …blended into the spectacular alpine setting of Martis Camp overlooking Lake Tahoe. …In a design that married heavy timbers with steel throughout, when it comes to large size timbers Pacific HemFir is a giant hit because it’s readily available in large sizes, thanks to the trees’ ability to produce big logs. They produce significant quantities of large cross-section lumber that seasons well, hardening as it dries and ages to give excellent durability throughout its lifespan, while remaining true to its original freshly-milled, pale blonde hue. …Pacific HemFir offers dependable performance thanks to its even density which allows for the uniform penetration of preservatives during the treatment process.

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LP Building Solutions releases Environmental Product Declarations

By LP Building Solutions
Business Wire in Stockhouse
September 26, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

NASHVILLE, Tennessee — LP Building Solutions announced that ASTM International has validated five Structural Solutions products as carbon negative. The five newly published environmental product declarations (EPDs)… have all been shown to store more carbon than is released during their entire life cycle. …EPDs provide transparency to consumers about the environmental footprint of products throughout their entire life cycle, from raw material sourcing to product end of life. To establish the products’ carbon-negative designation, LP developed life cycle assessments (LCAs) and EPDs for each product in line with internationally recognized protocols and standards, including ISO standards. …LP has released six EPDs since 2021, demonstrating the carbon negativity of products across the LP® Structural Solutions and LP® SmartSide® Trim & Siding product lines.

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Wood waste transformed into transparent, anti-fog coating

By Paul McClure
The New Atlas
September 26, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Researchers have developed a quick and easy way to turn the wood-based bioproduct lignin into nanoparticles that can create a transparent coating with anti-fog properties or a colorful antireflective surface. The discovery transforms this abundant waste product into a useful material with diverse applications, such as on glasses and vehicle windows. …One of the barriers to using lignin is its complicated molecular structure, which makes it difficult to break down. Now, researchers from Aalto University in Finland have developed a method of turning lignin into a bio-based transparent coating with anti-fogging and antireflective properties. …The small size of the particles enabled the researchers to control layer thickness and appearance, from transparent sub-monolayers to multilayered films, which allowed them to control the color and absorbance of light at different wavelengths. 

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Inside McDonald’s Hong Kong’s new Leed zero-carbon restaurant

By Irene Dong
Inside Retail Asia
September 26, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

McDonald’s has refurbished and turned its Tai Wo site in Hong Kong into a more sustainable place, strengthening its environmental commitment. The Tai Wo location recently became Hong Kong’s first Leed Zero Carbon restaurant, and the design is estimated to save 848.22 metric tonnes of CO2 at the restaurant, which is comparable to planting more than 36,000 16-foot-tall trees. According to the company, the outside facade is made from local trees that have fallen due to typhoons or old age, owing to a collaboration with eco-social startup HK Timberbank. The furniture and decor on the inside are produced from recycled materials. …It also includes a new collection of Happy Meal books and colouring games teaching young diners about environmental protection, from energy conservation to lowering carbon emissions.

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Superlimão uses mass timber for the “most sustainable McDonald’s in Brazil”

By Kate Mazade
Dezeen Magazine
September 26, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Local architecture office Superlimão Studio has created a lifted building with a tree-like structure constructed using mass timber for a McDonald’s restaurant in São Paulo.   Located at one of the busiest intersections of São Paulo, the 2,150-square foot (220-square metre) building is part of the American fast food chain’s “Recipe for the Future” initiative and was completed in 2023.  …Superlimão Studio employed cross-laminated timber (CLT) pillars with diagonal branching bracing to overcome the maximum spans of the materials to reinforce a  “connection with nature and the sustainability theme throughout the project,” the team said.  …The design uses engineered wood from floor to ceiling that can be seen from the street through glass curtain walls and exposed to occupants through an opening in the finish layers.

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Forestry

New Standard to Support Small-Scale, Low-Intensity and Community Forests

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Canada is pleased to announce the launch of its new Small-scale, Low-Intensity and Community Forests Standard (SLIMF + Community Forests Standard). This Standard is tailored to meet the unique needs of smallholders which may include private forest owners, community forests, Indigenous forest license holders and municipalities. It features fewer requirements and complexities compared to FSC Canada’s National Forest Stewardship Standard while still maintaining the rigorous environmental and social standards that FSC is known for. Effective from January 1, 2024, the SLIMF + Community Forests Standard reflects FSC Canada’s commitment to inclusivity, sustainability, and community engagement. “The SLIMF + Community Forests Standard represents a significant step forward in FSC Canada’s commitment to fostering sustainable forestry practices and empowering communities” says Francois Dufresne, FSC Canada President. “These forested areas play a vital role in Canada’s overall forest ecosystem. FSC is proud to have designed this new Standard in recognition of the unique needs of these groups.”

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Activists plan gatherings at BC MLA offices to advocate for old-growth forests

By Curtis Blandy
Victoria Buzz
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC is renowned for its beauty and gargantuan trees that can be found in abundance on Vancouver Island. These trees are often part of old-growth groves, meaning the trees are between 250 and over 1,000-years-old. The BC government has promised to vastly expand the protection of old-growth groves, but some activist groups don’t think they are doing enough. This Thursday, September 28th, the Sierra Club is organizing a widespread protest to demand BC Members of Legislative Assembly (MLAs) stick to their word and expand old-growth protection. This action will not be one that disrupts traffic, as old-growth protests have come to be known for in Victoria, but rather protesters will be encouraged to show up at their MLA’s office. September 28th was chosen because it marks the three year anniversary of the BC NDP’s announcement that they would commit to implement all of the 14 recommendations from the Old Growth Strategic Review.

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Dozens of climate groups prepare to protest international timber conference in Portland

By Alex Baumhardt
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Oregon — An annual conference of international timber industry leaders will focus this week in Portland on the ownership and development of Northwest forests while protestors gather and hold their own conference on preserving them. The industry conference, on Wednesday and Thursday, will feature panels on investments in private forests, with participants discussing everything from investments by international banks, timber companies and trusts to the future of private forest ownership and global markets for Northwest timber and wood products. It’s hosted by the 50-year-old nonprofit World Forestry Center in southwest Portland. …For the first time, it will face protests by more than two dozen environmental groups. Alex Budd said he’s expecting up to 200 people. …The forest climate alliance will hold a counter conference on Thursday in Portland, two miles from the World Forestry Center at the First Unitarian Church of Portland called “Forests Over Profits.”

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Biden’s Forest Service logging makes a mockery of his climate pledge

By Mike Garrity
The Missoulian
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Mike Garrity

Once again, the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Center for Biological Diversity and Council for Wildlife and Fish are challenging the Biden administration’s Forest Service on yet another massive clearcutting. This time it’s the South Plateau Project, right on the border of Yellowstone National Park. Yes, you read that right — Biden’s Forest Service is planning to clearcut the National Forests surrounding Yellowstone and our only hope of stopping them is going to court to force this rogue, law-breaking agency to follow the law.  …The agency failed to disclose the climate change impacts in blatant violation of the National Environmental Policy Act.  …The agency failed to even tell the public precisely where, when, or how it would bulldoze roads and clearcut the National Forest. Of course, that makes it impossible for the public, who own these forests, to review and analyze the project’s impacts as required by law. 

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Pacific Logging Congress hosts Live-In Woods Show in Rainier

By Dylan Reubenking
The Nisqually Valley News
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Deep in the woods of the Weyerhaeuser Vail Tree Farm, over 40 exhibitors in the forestry industry demonstrated the ins and outs of timber harvesting at the ninth Pacific Logging Congress Live In-Woods Show during the weekend of Sept. 21-23. The event was in Washington state for the first time in 13 years, as it occurs every four years and cycles between Washington, Oregon and California. howGalen Wright, a forestry consultant based in Olympia who has worked in the industry for 45 years, said the event is a great opportunity for people, especially the more than 2,000 students from 31 different schools on field trips, to learn about the forestry industry. It’s amazing how much we’ve mechanized the industry,” he said. …The event showcased both the Weyerhaeuser Vail Tree Farm in Rainier, as well as active and static industry displays.

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Arizona forest industry near collapse

By Pete Aleshire
Payson Roundup
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Sept. 19 meeting of the National Resources Working Group offered a glimpse of an overwhelmed Northern Arizona timber industry on the brink of collapse. The industry remains critical to saving communities like Payson and Show Low from the next megafire. It also will determine whether the C.C. Cragin Reservoir and even Roosevelt Lake fill up with silt and debris. But forest restoration plans will collapse if the Forest Service can’t process timber sales fast enough to sustain the existing industry, much less ramp up to the challenge of thinning six million acres of badly overgrown and mismanaged forests. The Forest Service in the past 20 years has managed only a fraction of the 50,000 acres of thinning per year promised by the 4-Forests Restoration Initiative. Even at that rate, it would take 80 years to treat 4 million acres.

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Brazil’s Amazon rainforest faces a severe drought that may affect around 500,000 people

Associated Press in the Globe and Mail
September 26, 2023
Category: Forestry

The Amazon rainforest in Brazil is facing a severe drought that may affect around 500,000 people by the end of the year, authorities said Tuesday. Many are already struggling to access essential supplies such as food and water, because the principal means of transportation in the region is waterways, and river levels are historically low. Droughts also impact fishing, a means of subsistence for many riverside communities. Amazonas state declared an environmental emergency two weeks ago in response to the prolonged drought and launched a response plan valued at $20 million. Authorities will also distribute food and water supplies as well as personal hygiene kits, the state’s civil defence agency said in a statement. Gov. Wilson Lima was in Brazil’s capital, Brasilia, on Tuesday to meet with representatives of the federal government. Lima spoke with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to discuss the drought.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Biochar is a ‘shovel-ready’ climate technology, but can it scale up?

By Max Graham
Grist
September 22, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

Beau Burgess

…The land, logged years ago, was in an industrial part of town, and its soil was in poor health. That anemia was part of the appeal for Burgess and his colleagues, who wanted to raise livestock in a way that would add nutrients and beneficial microbes to the ground, restore the local ecosystem, and improve the local food scene.   Today, Blood, Sweat, and Food Farms is something of an oasis.  …But one tool in particular stands out: biochar — a jet-black substance made by roasting plant matter, like wood, in an oxygen-deprived environment.  …Biochar now accounts for the vast majority of the carbon dioxide that has supposedly been removed from the air after being purchased by companies seeking to offset their planet-warming emissions, according to cdr.fyi, a website that tracks carbon removal data.  

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Microsoft signs carbon capture deal with Carbon Streaming

By Dan Swinhoe
Data Center Dynamics
September 27, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

Microsoft has signed a carbon capture agreement to remove CO2 by burying charcoal. Carbon Streaming Corporation last week announced it will provide Microsoft with carbon removal credits from the Waverly Biochar project in Waverly, Virginia. “We’re pleased to work with Carbon Streaming to support the development of biochar as a carbon removal approach through the Waverly Biochar project. Carbon Streaming’s capacity to provide project-level finance is an important part of scaling this industry and it ensures we can focus on procuring carbon removal from high-quality projects,” said Brian Marrs, senior director of energy and carbon, Microsoft. …Carbon Streaming said the Waverly Biochar project is expected to deliver up to 10,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide removal credits per year towards Microsoft’s carbon negative target. The Waverly project will see a biochar production facility located at a wood pellet manufacturer in Waverly, in Virginia’s Sussex County.

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Health & Safety

APA Releases 2022 Safety & Health Award Winners

APA – The Engineered Wood Association
September 25, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, United States

Structurlam Mass Timber Corporation and LP won Safest Company Awards in their respective categories. Structurlam Mass Timber Corporation won for companies with three or fewer mills and posted an average Weighted Incident Rate (WIR) of 0.00 for 2022. LP earned top honors among companies with four or more mills, with a WIR of 4.59. The coveted Innovation in Safety Award went to Tolko Industries Ltd. for the Equipment-Based Innovation Award, while Boise Cascade Wood Products, LLC won the Jeff Wagner Process-Based Innovation Award. Tolko Industries Ltd. Armstrong Plywood Division in Armstrong, British Columbia, won the Equipment-Based Award with its “Veneer Load Marking Robot.” Boise Cascade Wood Products, LLC Alexandria EWP mill in Lena, Louisiana, took the Jeff Wagner Process-Based award for its “New Hire Mentorship Program.

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Fair Practices Commissioner to provide an independent review for WorkSafeBC complaints

WorkSafeBC
September 26, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

RICHMOND, BC – The Fair Practices Commissioner (FPC) for WorkSafeBC is now up and running. The FPC gives workers, employers and workers’ dependants the opportunity to be heard if a complaint hasn’t been resolved through a WorkSafeBC manager or the organization’s Issue Resolution Office (formerly called the Fair Practices Office). The FPC was established by the provincial government through legislation, and it has a reporting structure that enhances independence from the rest of WorkSafeBC. Fair Practices Commissioner Allan Seckel was appointed in May 2023 by WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors for a renewable three-year term. “My role is to provide an independent review for workers, employers, and workers’ dependants relating to alleged unfairness by WorkSafeBC,” said Allan Seckel, the Fair Practices Commissioner. “I’m honoured to be the first Fair Practices Commissioner for WorkSafeBC.”

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Two dead, four injured in Northern B.C. helicopter crash

By Mike Hager
The Globe and Mail
September 26, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rescuers hiked into the bush Tuesday to a helicopter crash off a highway east of Prince George, B.C., finding two dead people and four others who had survived, some with only minor injuries. Authorities have not said who owns the Bell 206L helicopter, but lumber giant Canfor Corp. has confirmed that it had hired the pilot to transport five forestry surveyors it contracted in the region. Melanie Perrin, the public safety manager of the local Fraser-Fort George Regional District, said it is remarkable that four people escaped alive. …Liam MacDonald, a spokesperson with the federal Transportation Safety Board, said a team of investigators was headed to the downed helicopter, just north of the Purden Ski Hill, a mountain resort. …Canfor said that it had hired all the victims to do survey work in the field, but none of them were full-time employees of the company.

Additional coverage in CTV News: 2 dead, 4 injured in helicopter crash near Prince George, B.C.

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On pawtrol: Sparky the Robodog enhances safety at UK’s largest renewable power station

Drax Group Inc.
September 27, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

Drax Power Station, Britain’s single-largest renewable power generator, has a new four-legged friend to help sniff out hazards to keep people safe. Sparky, a state-of-the-art robotic dog, has joined the plant and will carry out inspections and capture critical data on machinery. The robodog has joined Drax’s Condition Based Maintenance team to spot potential failures on the plant before they happen. The bright yellow dog is fitted with a camera which enables it to conduct critical visual and thermal inspections on equipment such as hot boilers while its human controllers are kept safe away from the equipment. As Sparky gets familiar with the plant, he will be programmed to follow tailored routes around the site. This will enable him to operate autonomously, enhancing efficiency even further. Ensuring the safety, health, and wellbeing of people on site is the company’s top priority. 

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