Daily News for July 25, 2024

Today’s Takeaway

Wildfire reaches Jasper, firefighters battle to protect town

The Tree Frog Forestry News
July 25, 2024
Category: Today's Takeaway

A wildfire reached the town of Jasper, Alberta on Wednesday, one of hundreds ravaging Alberta and BC. In related news: Jasper’s wildfire preparedness is being put to the test; Canada looks to Indigenous use of fire to combat risks; the US Endowment and USDA announce grants to enhance protections and reduce wildfire risk; Lake Tahoe employs forest thinning; and an eastern Oregon fire is creating storms of its own. Meanwhile: Quebec refuses to participate in federal consultations on emergency decree to protect caribou.

In Business news: Competition Bureau Canada defines legal risks of corporate greenwashing; journalist Keith Baldrey opines on the US protectionist policies of both political parties; Russ Taylor resurrects his global conference on forest products trade; West Fraser Timber and International Paper report positive Q2, 2024 results; and more on Clearwater Paper’s tissue operations sale.

Finally, a UK study says tree bark plays vital role in removing methane gas.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog Editor

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Special Feature

Russ Taylor, Kevin Mason join forces, resurrect global conference on timber, forest product & trade

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
July 25, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Tree Frog News sat down with global wood markets analyst Russ Taylor to discuss his upcoming GLOBAL WOOD SUMMIT conference in Vancouver, October 28-30.

Why resurrect this global conference now? Simply put, there was a void in the conference market for bringing buyers, sellers, producers, traders, and service providers together to discuss international developments in markets and in forest products dynamics. There is also a general market malaise, post-covid—particularly in lumber, panel, and log markets, and too many private forecasts of ‘better-days-ahead’ that end up so different from reality. This means that the need for up-to-date, detailed insights and discussions on global developments in pulp, paper, logs, lumber and panels has never been so important.

What’s new with this conference and what will differentiate it from your previous ones? For the most part, the Summit will be like my previous Vancouver conferences—under the Wood Markets banner—with one major difference. I was able to secure a conference partnership with Kevin Mason and his expert industry/market research team at ERA Forest Products Research. This will allow the joint conference team to broaden the speaker and topic offerings; professionally, experience-wise and by product type and geography. …We can now go into more depth in terms of product lines, geographic regions and speakers, making the summit a marquee event for the global trade. …Our conferences have always achieved top marks as a networking event. …The other assured highlight will be the many strategic information exchanges from our expert speakers. For more information, you can check out our Global Wood Summit website.

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Business & Politics

Competition Bureau Canada outlines what can be considered corporate greenwashing

By Jeffrey Jones
The Globe and Mail in Business in Vancouver
July 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — The Competition Bureau has published guidance on what might constitute corporate greenwashing as it begins consultations over how it will implement Ottawa’s contentious new measures aimed at preventing false and misleading environmental claims. The bureau said goals and timelines for achieving environmental objectives such as reducing carbon emissions must be supported by clear and specific plans, and not just be aspirational. It also warned companies against trying to shield their green assertions with disclaimers. The agency issued the commentary on Monday as it launched a request for feedback to help it formulate plans for implementing the new measures, which some companies, industry associations and provincial governments have criticized for being vague and heavy-handed. The consultation period runs to Sept. 27. Bill C-59 contains the controversial amendment to the Competition Act that puts companies at legal risk for making environmental assertions that do not stand up to scrutiny. 

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How the latest U.S. ‘political earthquake’ could impact B.C.

By Keith Baldrey, Global BC
Business in Vancouver
July 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Keith Baldrey

Biden’s looming departure throws the U.S. presidential contest into massive uncertainty and the vote is less than three months from now. …Polls over the years have shown Trump is not popular in Canada and certainly not in B.C., but his support has inched up over time. …The difference in how [the leaders] are viewed by the Canadian electorate may more likely be based on personalities than policies. That’s because the most contentious of all U.S. policies that affect Canada and B.C. are usually related to foreign trade, and both Trump and Biden have had similar policies when it comes to protectionism. Trump greatly increased the number of economic tariffs and penalties on Canadian goods and Biden, for the most part, left them largely in place (his administration continued the decades-old softwood lumber dispute with B.C.). Harris, for her part, has voiced support for protectionist policies as well. Protectionist measures from both U.S. parties appear to be here to stay, much to Canada and B.C.’s potential detriment. 

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Idaho has a giant mill that makes toilet paper. Why its owner just sold that business

By Elaine Williams
Idaho Statesman
July 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Clearwater Paper has reached a deal to sell the tissue operations at the company’s big Lewiston pulp and paper mill to an Italian company for $1.06 billion. Clearwater Paper makes tissue paper at the mill and cuts and packages it into toilet paper, paper towels, paper napkins and facial tissues. The tissue comes from wood pulp that is also produced in the factory along the Clearwater River. That pulp also supplies the plant’s third product, paperboard. But only the tissue-paper operation was sold the Italian company, Sofidel, headquartered in Lucca, Italy. The deal the two companies came about five months after Clearwater Paper President and CEO Arsen Kitch said his Spokane-based company was evaluating strategic options for its tissue business so it could focus on paperboard instead. …The sale would include Clearwater Paper’s tissue operations in three other U.S cities too, according to a news release about the agreement from Sofidel.

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Canadian wildfire reaches Jasper, firefighters battle to protect oil pipeline

Reuters
July 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, US West

JASPER, Alberta — A wildfire reached the Canadian town of Jasper, Alberta on Wednesday, one of hundreds ravaging the western provinces of Alberta and British Columbia, as firefighters battled to save key facilities such as the Trans Mountain Pipeline, authorities said. Wildfires burning uncontrolled across the region include 433 in British Columbia and 176 in Alberta, more than a dozen of them in the area of Fort McMurray, an oil sands hub. The pipeline, which can carry 890,000 barrels per day of oil from Edmonton to Vancouver, runs through a national park in the Canadian Rockies near the picturesque tourist town, from which about 25,000 people were forced to evacuate on Tuesday. “Firefighters … are working to save as many structures as possible and protect critical infrastructure, including the wastewater treatment plant, communications facilities, the Trans Mountain Pipeline,” Parks Canada said. …Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government approved Alberta’s request for federal assistance.

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Finance & Economics

West Fraser reports positive Q2, 2024 results

By West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
Cision Newswire
July 24, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC — West Fraser Timber reported its second quarter results of 2024. Q2 sales were $1.705 billion, compared to $1.627 billion in the first quarter of 2024, and Q2 earnings were $105 million compared to $35 million in Q1, 2024. Q2 Adjusted EBITDA was $272 million compared to $200 million in the Q1, 2024. Other highlights include: Lumber segment Adjusted EBITDA of $(51) million, North America Engineered Wood Products segment Adjusted EBITDA of $308 million, and Pulp & Paper segment Adjusted EBITDA of $9 million. …”We continued to experience demand softness in our North American lumber business, particularly for SYP lumber with its greater relative exposure to repair and remodelling applications,” said Sean McLaren, West Fraser’s President and CEO. …”We continue to realize the financial benefits from the recent closures of some of our higher-cost lumber mills and will continue to focus on optimizing our portfolio of assets to lower costs and create a more resilient organization.”

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US Sawmill Production Declines During First Quarter

By Jesse Wade
NAHB – Eye on Housing
July 24, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The production index for sawmills and wood preservation industries fell at the start of 2024 to 91.9 in the first quarter (the index measures real output during 2017 at a level of 100). This is the second straight decline for the quarterly level according to the Federal Reserve’s recent release of G.17 data. The index fell 4.3% in the first quarter of 2024, after also falling 4.3% during the previous quarter. Compared to a year ago, production was 3.8% lower at the start of 2024. …The sawmill and wood preservation industry full utilization rates fell marginally for the second straight quarter, from 60.8% to 60.4%. This decline explains part of the production decline for the industry. Additionally, as average plant hours per week in operation fell for these firms, the decline was not due to an increase in production capacity of these firms but rather a decline in output as the plants were in operation for fewer hours.

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International Paper reports positive Q2, 2024 results

By International Paper
Cision Newswire
July 24, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

MEMPHIS, Tennessee — International Paper reported second quarter 2024 financial results. Highlights include: Q2 net earnings of $498 million; adjusted operating earnings (non-GAAP) of $193 million; cash provided by operations of $365 million and returned $160 million to shareholders in dividends. …Andy Silvernail, Chief Executive Officer said, “While our second quarter financial results increased sequentially on better price and seasonally higher volumes, we expect near-term performance to be challenged. In order to accelerate improvement, we are deploying an 80/20 business process. …In North America, our investments will center on providing customers with the most reliable and innovative packaging solutions. We also look forward to the combination with DS Smith and together creating significant value for our shareholders.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

New Vancouver community centre makes creative use of mass timber

By Peter Caulfield
Daily Commercial News
July 24, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC — Marpole Community Centre is being replaced with a modern structure. The new two-storey building will be 42,000 square feet in area, almost 50 per cent larger than the existing facility. Construction is expected to complete in the fourth quarter of 2026. …It will use 1,500 cubic metres of mass timber, says Rohan Schneider, senior design engineer with Fast + Epp, the structural engineer on the project. According to Fast + Epp, “At the heart of construction lies the gravity system, which predominantly features timber as the primary structural material.” Cross-Laminated Timber (CLT) panels rest on glulam beams and columns to create the facility’s floors and terraces, while the curved roof combines steel beams and CLT panels. Light-wood shear walls placed within the architectural partitions will provide lateral support to ensure minimal intrusion into the building space while maintaining structural integrity. One of the architectural features is the double-curved cantilever roof, supported by long-span steel beams.

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Forestry

Canada looks to centuries-old indigenous use of fire to combat out-of-control wildfires

By Keith Matheny
The Detroit Free Press
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

As Canada deals with the same wildfire problems plaguing the western U.S. — fires of increasing intensity burning larger areas as the climate and forests change — Canadian governments are spending hundreds of millions of dollars on more and better firefighting equipment, increased personnel, fire-tracking satellites and improving community readiness. But some experts believe part of the solution to reducing catastrophic megafires involves practices that go back thousands of years, to the land’s first inhabitants: fighting fire with fire. The indigenous people of Canada for centuries intentionally set fires on the landscape for a variety of cultural needs. “They burned for medicinal plants, for food plants, to produce firewood, to produce teepee poles, other technological uses — warmth, cooking, everything else. It was how you survived on this landscape,” said Robert Gray, a wildland fire ecologist who runs his own company, RW Gray Consulting based in Chilliwack, British Columbia.

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Application period opens for Adam Yeadon Memorial Scholarship

By Lisa Bucher
My True North Now
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Adam Yeadon

The Adam Yeadon Memorial Scholarship is currently accepting applications. This scholarship aims to assist students from the Northwest Territories (NWT) who are seeking education in forestry or wildfire management. “As someone who chose to pursue a career in this field, I can confidently say there are many rewarding paths this industry can provide for your future. I encourage anyone interested to apply,” says Jay Macdonald, Minister of Environment and Climate Change. The Adam Yeadon Memorial Scholarship was created in 2024 to commemorate Yeadon’s legacy. The anniversary of Yeadon’s passing, who died on July 15 while defending his community on the fire line, was observed by family, friends, and the NWT Fire team in Fort Liard as they came together to remember and heal. Scholarships will be awarded to full-time post-secondary students who are enrolled in approved diploma, degree, or training programs in forestry or wildfire management.

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Alberni Valley Community Forest delivers $300,000 dividend to city

By Susie Quinn
The Alberni Valley News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Alberni Valley Community Forest board has once again delivered a $300,000 dividend cheque to its sole shareholder, the City of Port Alberni. The dividends came from operating revenue in 2023 and were presented at the AVCF annual general meeting on May 22, 2024, community forest manager Chris Law said. The AVCF has contributed between $4 million and $5 million to the city since it was established, he added, including $2.5 million toward the purchase of the Somass Sawmill lands. Law and the AVCF board were busy this spring assessing their cut level to ensure it remains sustainable. “We’re only cutting half of what we’re allowed,” Law noted. “We’re not sure that’s sustainable in the long run.” …The AVCF is up to date on replanting what has been harvested, he added. Ongoing drought conditions have been challenging as mortality of seedlings is higher, however, anything that was lost due to drought has also been replanted at additional cost.

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An open letter to MLA Brittny Anderson about logging

Letter by Andrea Fox, Elemental Journeys
Nelson Star
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

RE: Reconnecting with forests and the need for responsible logging: Dear Brittny. Thank you for your testimonial of our adventure up Sproule Creek in the Nelson Star. It was my pleasure to share the magic of this place and reflect on the disastrous effect on this community watershed if we were to continue to exploit and build new roads through this primary forest. …I appreciate you highlighting the work of local community forests and small scale operations (such as Harrop-Procter). I believe that broad scale industrial forestry has much to learn from these progressive ways. In particular, British Columbia Timber Sales (BCTS) which is government owned and operated, as well as the Ministry of Forests, who relies on the archaic professional reliance model and the overinflated annual allowable cut method of approving permits. …If citizens are to consider re-electing the NDP, a major overhaul of BCTS is needed. We are counting on you.

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Jasper’s wildfire preparedness work put to the test as out-of-control fires threaten townsite

By Janet French
CBC News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

For years, Parks Canada and the Municipality of Jasper have removed trees and branches, logged a firebreak, ignited controlled burns and asked residents to clear yard debris in hopes of protecting the forest-nestled town from a dangerous blaze. Those mitigations may now be put to the test. …”A big part of these treatments is not necessarily to stop the fire cold in its tracks, but to slow the fire and keep the fire on the surface rather than spreading fire in the canopy,” said Jen Beverly, a University of Alberta associate professor. …Parks Canada’s uses strategies like prescribed burns and the maintenance of a fireguard to protect properties and important sites in Jasper National Park. The federal agency and the municipality have been working to thin the forest around the town since 2003. In 2018 and 2019, they also hired Canfor to carefully cut down trees on a slope west of town to create a protective firebreak.

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How does Canada’s 2024 wildfire season so far compare to historic 2023?

The Weather Network in Yahoo! News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

With hundreds of wildfires burning across Canada amid a period of extreme heat for multiple regions, how does the season in 2024 rank when looking at the historical and destructive 2023? …To date, Canada has had nearly 3,700 blazes burn approximately 2.2 million hectares of land so far this year, with about 1,000 active wildfires across the country as of July 24. The good news is that it is considerably less than what was burned countrywide around this time last year. Approximately 11.9 million hectares of land had been scorched through July 2023. …Around the same time last year, BC had seen roughly 1.46 million hectares of land burned, thanks to a surge in fire activity. For 2024, the total is noticeably less, with wildfires burning a total of more than 790,000 hectares. …For Alberta, by July 22, 2023, there was 1.75 million hectares burned while there has been roughly 540,000 hectares burned so far this year.

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Quebec refuses to participate in federal consultation on caribou decree

By Stéphane Blais
La Presse Canadienne in the Montreal Gazette
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec Environment Minister Benoit Charette and provincial Forestry Minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina have informed federal Environment Minister Stephen Guilbeault that their government will not participate in consultations on the development of an emergency decree to protect caribou. In a six-page letter sent on Wednesday, the provincial ministers reiterated that the emergency decree announced last month by Ottawa is a “unilateral and illegitimate decision by the federal government that is categorically rejected by Quebec.” Ottawa’s approach “constitutes an unspeakable affront and is in opposition to the respect for the sharing of constitutional powers between the levels of government,” the ministers contend. Not only will Quebec not participate in consultations to determine the scope of the decree, but “the federal government must fully assume the economic and social consequences of its decision,” the ministers warned. …The job losses (~2,000) would result from a forecast loss of permitted logging …the equivalent of 1.4 million cubic metres of lumber annually.

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Forest thinning projects underway at Lake Tahoe

By Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team
Living with Fire Tahoe
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – Tahoe Fire & Fuels Team forest thinning projects are underway in the Lake Tahoe Basin. These projects are expected to continue for the next several weeks with some projects continuing through the fall, conditions and weather permitting. For project details view the Forest Thinning Projects Map at Tahoe Living With Fire which highlights current and upcoming projects. After decades of fire suppression, Tahoe Basin’s forests are overstocked and highly vulnerable to insects, disease, and catastrophic wildfire. Forest thinning projects are a vital forest management tool used by land managers to help protect communities by removing excess vegetation (fuels) on public lands that can feed unwanted wildfires. These projects complement defensible space and home hardening efforts on private property in neighborhoods and communities. Forest thinning also contributes to improved forest health, wildlife habitat, and watershed and forest resilience in the face of climate change.

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Durkee Fire creates extreme storms, wind and closes I-84 in eastern Oregon

By Emma Logan
The Salem Statesman Journal
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — One of the biggest fires burning in the United States is the Durkee Fire in eastern Oregon. As of Wednesday morning, the fire was reported at 244,858 acres and continues to grow as intense weather is expected to hit the area. The Oregon Department of Transportation closed Interstate 84 from Pendleton to Ontario on Wednesday. …The area is under a red flag warning, hurricane force winds and a flash flood warning, according to the Durkee Fire updates. The National Weather Service also expects extreme thunderstorms and lightning in the area. Due to the immense heat the Durkee Fire is creating and the existing winds, it is creating its own storms and changing the overall wind patterns. “We call those pyrocumulus and you end up with a thunderstorm over the fire because there’s so much heat and just enough moisture above the fire to get a storm that forms,” Mike Cantin, a meteorologist said.

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$1.718 Million in Grants Announced for Innovative Finance for National Forests Program

The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

GREENVILLE, South CarolinaSeven new grants will support local stakeholders and project developers to connect public and private capital to unfunded environmental challenges in National Forests and surrounding landscapes across the United States. These seven awards represent the fourth round of funding from the Innovative Finance for National Forests Grant Program. This partnership is funded and administered by the USDA Forest Service National Partnership Office’s Conservation Finance Program and the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities (Endowment). “The 2024 Innovative Finance for National Forests grantees are exploring use of loan guarantees, state revolving funds, and other mechanisms to reduce forest wildfire risk, enhance watershed protection, and create new recreation opportunities,” said Pete Madden, president and chief executive officer of the Endowment.

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Forestry company covers Bob Brown Foundation activists’ legal costs after revoking protest ban

Pulse Tasmania
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT) has been forced to back down after wrongly issuing notices banning 19 environmental protesters from entering over 800,000 hectares of Tasmanian public forest. The notices, issued last year, barred protesters from entering all permanent timber production zone land and forestry roads in response to protest action against the logging of a 17-hectare native coupe in the state’s north-west. Bob Brown Foundation campaign manager Scott Jordan described the ban as “illegal intimidation”, saying it prevented some protesters from leaving their homes or going to work. “This is an embarrassing backdown by the state logging agency who have taken six months to come clean,” he said. “That Forestry Tasmania, a government agency, acted in such an unlawful and intimidatory manner is a symptom of a government that will do anything to prevent public protest against logging of our precious native forests.” Jordan said the business will cover the protesters’ estimated $27,000 legal costs.

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Robbins Lumber among Maine companies beginning climate project

By Keenan Mills
WABI TV5
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry

SEARSMONT, Maine – The New England Forest Foundation is building a stronger community. They recently gifted six companies across the state grants with the goal of more climate-friendly forestry work. Maine’s Robbins Lumber Company was one of the businesses granted this money. …The United States Department of Agriculture is partnering with the New England Forest Foundation to start a Climate-Smart Commodities Partnership Project. The $30 million project gives an opportunity for companies like Robbins Lumber not only to increase carbon in the forests in their area but across the state. “It benefits the landowners, it benefits the general public, because all of these thinnings are going to be using, to make electricity,” answered Jim Robbins. …The climate isn’t the only thing benefiting from this project. “Plus, it provides a lot of jobs. In rural Maine, where we need jobs,” added Robbins.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Tree bark plays vital role in removing methane from atmosphere, study finds

By Ellen McNally
The Guardian
July 24, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Microbes in the bark of trees play a vital role in removing methane from the atmosphere, scientists have discovered. The greenhouse gas is a product of agriculture and the burning of fossil fuels and is 28 times more potent than carbon dioxide. However, it remains in the atmosphere for a shorter time. Methane has been responsible for about 30% of global heating since preindustrial times, with emissions currently rising at their fastest rate since the 1980s. The study by the University of Birmingham investigated methane absorption levels in upland tropical forests in the Amazon and Panama; temperate broadleaf trees in Wytham Woods in Oxfordshire in the UK; and boreal coniferous forest trees in Sweden. … Prof Vincent Gauci said: “Our results suggest that planting more trees, and reducing deforestation must be important parts of any approach towards the Global Methane Pledge to cut methane emissions by 30% by the end of the decade.”

 

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Health & Safety

Board of Directors approves amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation

WorkSafeBC
July 25, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

At its May 2024 meeting, WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors approved amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. The amendments relate to Emergency Planning and Notice of Project — Tower Crane. These amendments were posted online for feedback during the public hearing process. Stakeholder feedback for Emergency Planning and Notice of Project — Tower Crane is available for review.Strikethrough versions of the amendments with explanatory notes can be accessed below. Deletions in the regulatory amendments are identified in strikethrough and additions are in bold text and highlighted in yellow.

 

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Forest Fires

Bow Valley preparing for intense fire activity as region sees extreme fire danger

By Brendan Coulter
CBC News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

With crews battling to save the town of Jasper, Alta., from wildfires, communities in the Bow Valley are gearing up in case of increased fire behaviour further south. Banff National Park and the towns of Banff and Canmore, Alta., are all facing extreme fire danger due to recent hot temperatures and bone-dry weather. On Wednesday evening, two out-of-control fires were burning east of the Banff National Park boundary in the Calgary and Rocky Mountain House forest areas. Banff fire Chief Russ Geyer said his team is ready for whatever conditions come their way. “Right now, we are in a state of readiness,” said Geyer. “We’ve spent [many years] preparing equipment, training personnel and being prepared for events such as the fire that Jasper is seeing right now.”

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Jasper faces ‘significant loss’ of buildings, infrastructure as wildfire engulfs Alberta town

By Nicholas Frew and Thandiwe Konguavi
CBC News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jasper Mayor Richard Ireland choked up Wednesday night, reflecting on how an evacuation order issued days ago may have saved thousands of lives, while an out-of-control wildfire burned his community. A wildfire had threatened the Alberta mountainside townsite for days from the south, but finally reached it in the evening. Ireland knew little more than the rest of the public Wednesday night about the damage toll, as flames consumed multiple buildings, including the Maligne Lodge and at least the grounds of the Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge. “This is simply our community’s worst nightmare,” Ireland told CBC News. Parks Canada said “significant loss has occurred within the townsite” in a social media post at 10 p.m. MT, but was unable to “report on the extent of damage to specific locations or neighbourhoods at this time.”

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Jasper wildfire live updates: ‘Significant loss’ in townsite, Flames hit Jasper Park Lodge grounds

By Trevor Robb
The Edmonton Journal
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

JASPER, Alberta — Wildfires bearing down on the historic Jasper townsite reached its southern outskirts early Wednesday night as a last-ditch attempt to reroute it failed. Parks Canada reports ‘significant loss’ in the townsite as crews work to save as many structures as possible. The fire was reported to have reached the grounds of the iconic Jasper Park Lodge. Deteriorating air quality forced wildland firefighters and others without self-contained breathing apparatuses to evacuate to Hinton. People who have not left Jasper are told to do so immediately. …The largest fire is estimated to be among the largest in Jasper National Park’s history at 10,800 hectares in size and burning just eight kilometres from the town. Parks Canada officials Wednesday said the smaller, 270-hectare south wildfire moved four kilometres to the north overnight. …Rain is forecast for Wednesday but officials cautioned, “the rain doesn’t count until it’s on the ground.”

Related by the Associated Press: Fast-moving wildfire in the Canadian Rockies’ largest national park hits the town of Jasper

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Expect more evacuation orders and alerts, B.C. wildfire officials warn

CBC News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C. officials said the wildfire situation in the province is “rapidly evolving,” telling residents they may see more evacuation orders and alerts in the coming days. There are currently around 430 active wildfires, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service… and round 60% of them are considered by the service to be out of control. …”This past week has been difficult for many people and communities, and we are expecting more challenging days ahead,” B.C. Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma said. Ma encouraged residents who have to evacuate to call their insurance provider once they’re safe and outside the evacuation order area to understand how they’ll cover living expenses. …On Wednesday, stormy weather is expected to continue in the north, and the Interior is forecast to keep seeing strong winds. …Canada will also be receiving firefighting help from Mexico and South Africa, Sajjan said, in addition to crews that have already arrived from New Zealand and Australia.

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Ontario forest fire season quieter than anticipated

By Elaine Della-Mattia
The Timmins Daily Press
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

The wildfire season in Ontario has been a little quieter than anticipated this year. That’s likely because forest fires are a weather driven phenomenon and Ontario has seen significant rainfall since the spring, with some rain experienced every few days, said Evan Lizotte, fire information officer for Ontario’s Northeast region. The anticipated increased forest fire season came after a relatively dry winter with less snow cover than expected. …after a hot and dry summer in 2023 and low snowfall in the winter, that could have made a high wildfire season this year. …Meanwhile, throughout the season, Ontario’s crews have assisted with larger fire seasons experienced west of Ontario, including Manitoba, Alberta and now British Columbia. To date this year there have been 173 fires in Ontario, down from 470 fires during the same timeframe in 2023. The 10-year-average is 414 fires, the data shows.

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Oregon wildfires: Smoke from Slate Fire seen from Detroit Lake

By Emma Logan and Elliott Deins
Salem Statesman Journal
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

As wildfires continue to burn across Oregon, extreme weather is forecast for Eastern Oregon. According to the Oregon State Fire Marshal, the weather is forecast to be most extreme Wednesday afternoon and evening, with a red flag, excessive heat and flash flood warnings in place. The area is also forecast to see lightning, winds that could reach 60 mph and high temperatures. “We are working with every tool we have to protect people and property,” Oregon State Fire Marshal Mariana Ruiz-Temple said in a press release on Wednesday. “The Oregon structural fire service, our out-of-state firefighters, and our wildland partners are working relentlessly around the clock. I want to say thank you. This is a monumental challenge that every firefighter and support staff is rising to.” Here’s the latest on wildfires burning across Oregon.

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Forest History & Archives

Student project provides key component for new history museum exhibit

By Hilary Matheson
The Daily Inter Lake
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: United States, US West

A train is on its way to the Northwest Montana History Museum in Kalispell.  Arrival time will be announced as the museum assembles crews together to design a new permanent exhibit — a model railroad and locomotive display highlighting the timber industry, namely Somer’s Sawmill, the largest in the valley in the 1900s. The Great Northern Railway came to town to build an 11-mile railroad line to the sawmill. In return, the railroad was supplied with railroad ties. “It was a spur line that went from Somers up to Kalispell,” museum volunteer curator Jane Renfrow said, with timber one of the first major commodities in the valley. “There was a timber famine going on in the rest of the United States.”  …The display will be installed in the “timber room” at the museum, which showcases the history of the logging industry in the Flathead Valley and is the museum’s oldest permanent exhibit. 

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