Daily News for May 06, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

Trump and Carney hold high-stakes meeting amid tariff war

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

A Trump—Carney meeting today could ease tariff tensions or deepen the divide. In related news: ERA’s Kevin Mason on the high cost of replacing Canadian lumber; DHA’s Keith Christman speaks to decorative hardwood impacts; Mark Carney looks to prefabricated homes to address housing shortage; and lumber prices ease as futures hit yearly lows. Meanwhile: Georgia-Pacific is closing its Emporia, Virginia plywood mill; International Paper breaks ground at its Waterloo, Iowa packaging facility; a log yard fire at BC’s Pioneer Log Homes; and Boise Cascade reports Q1 net income of $40M.

In Forestry news: Trump’s budget proposal points to deep cuts to forest lands; Alaska and New Hampshire seek to boost forest conservation; new research on forest recovery challenges after severe fire; a new study on boreal forests at the UN Forum on Forests; New Zealand on track to ban full farm-to-forest conversions; and the latest news from FSC Canada.

Finally, meet the professionals at BCIT’s industry-driven Wood Processing Program.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

Advance Your Career in Wood Processing with BCIT’s Industry-Driven Associate Certificate Programs

BCIT School of Construction and the Environment
May 6, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Professionals working in the lumber and sawmill sector and looking to advance their careers can gain specialized training through BCIT’s Associate Certificate in Industrial Wood Processing, starting June 2025. The IWP program was developed with industry subject matter experts and informed by industry leaders to support upskilling and professional development within the sector. The program is 1-year, delivered online and part-time to allow students to balance work and studies.

What sets the program apart is the expertise behind the scenes—seasoned instructors who bring decades of hands-on experience from across North America. Here’s a look at some of the leading professionals guiding the next generation of wood processing experts: Wayne Horvath – Lumber Fundamentals; Julie Cool – Sawmill Technology; Vahid Nasir – Wood Processing Tools; and Ciprian Pirvu – Quality Control & Kiln Drying.

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

Replacing Canadian lumber imports with US production would take a decade (at least) and cost more than $10 billion: ERA

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
May 5, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Kevin Mason

The US administration’s goal is clear: reduce imports and boost domestic manufacturing of wood products. Eliminating lumber imports would require an additional ~14Bbf of US domestic lumber production, representing a 40% increase on current production. …The big challenge in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) is that key infrastructure is missing: logging infrastructure, sawmill infrastructure and human resources. Logging infrastructure would require increasing logging employment, and that has been on a downward slope for decades as young people find other, similarly paid work more attractive. Third-party contractors could provide logging (and permitting) support, but they would face the same problems of scaling up. Harvest restrictions since 1994 have resulted in large-diameter timber now so the logs are no longer an appropriate size for local mills. Also, roads need to be built.

Unlike in the PNW, federal lands in the South have remained active suppliers of timber, along with other willing timber suppliers (including REITs and private landowners). …If the U.S. were to replace all (or the majority) of lumber imports, we would expect to see new supply coming from the South. …Replacing imports would take a decade, at least, and cost more than $10B for sawmills alone (potentially much higher with escalating costs for steel, machinery, etc.). We also highlight challenges, albeit different ones from the PNW. Investment is a big one. In an uncertain global macroeconomic environment, we do not expect to see major capital investment announcements. …Another big challenge is end-market demand from housing activity. If construction materials and labour costs rise meaningfully on tariff and immigration policies, affordability will decline and the near- term rationale for capital investment will be eroded—even if tariffs have forced housing prices higher (i.e., the stagflation scenario).

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Business & Politics

Trump and Canada’s Carney to hold high-stakes meeting amid tariff war, takeover threat

By Justin Gomez, Michelle Stoddart & Alexandra Hutzler
ABC News
May 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Donald Trump & Mark Carney

President Donald Trump and Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney meet on Tuesday at the White House for a high-stakes, and possibly tense, meeting amid a tariff trade war between the two neighbors and allies. The two leaders will greet each other at 11:30 a.m. ET and then hold a bilateral meeting in the Oval Office. Carney’s visit comes off the heels of his election win. After his victory, Carney warned Canadians: “Trump is trying to break us so that America can own us. That will never, that will never ever happen.” Trump, meanwhile, has taken relentless aim at Canada since returning to office in January. …Trump has said that Canada “wants to make a deal,” while Carney said that they will focus on “trade pressures and the broader future economic and security relationship.” …Trump and Carney’s face-to-face could yield progress on easing tariffs or strain the relationship even further.

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Fire being held at Pioneer Log Homes log yard near Williams Lake

By Ruth Lloyd
100 Mile Free Press
May 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Update: The fire in the log yard at Pioneer Log Homes near Williams Lake is being held. Original: Multiple fire crews are on scene at the Pioneer Log Homes of B.C. compound near Williams Lake Monday, May 5. Log decks are on fire on the west side of the property, the main log home building site for the company, which was featured in the Timber Kings reality television show. Partially constructed homes and the construction crane have so far not been impacted by the blaze. …A prescribed burn took place near the compound last week, but firefighters have not yet provided information on the cause of the fire.

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Georgia-Pacific to Close Emporia Plywood Facility in Virginia

Georgia Pacific
May 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ATLANTA, Georgia – Employees at the Emporia Plywood mill in Emporia, Virginia, were told that Georgia-Pacific will permanently close the plant. Approximately 550 jobs will be impacted. Normal operations will cease May 2 – and the site will be permanently closed on July 1. Georgia-Pacific will provide all affected employees with at least 60 days’ pay with benefits in accordance with WARN. Housing affordability challenges and a 30-year low in existing home sales are impacting our plywood business, as many of our plywood products are used in repair and remodel projects, which often occur when homes change ownership. To align with current demand, we are reducing our production capacity. A decision on the facility and property will be made at a later date.

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International Paper Celebrates the Groundbreaking of Greenfield Packaging Facility in Waterloo, Iowa

By International Paper
PR Newswire
May 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MEMPHIS, Tennessee — International Paper announces the groundbreaking of its new state-of-the-art sustainable, packaging box plant in Waterloo, Iowa. …Located in the heart of the Midwest, the new facility will primarily focus on serving the protein segment, providing tailored packaging solutions and meeting the growing demand for high-quality, sustainable packaging. …The Waterloo box plant will feature cutting-edge technology and equipment, enabling International Paper to deliver innovative and sustainable packaging solutions. …The new facility is currently scheduled to begin operations in the fourth quarter of 2026 and create an estimated 65 new jobs to the current facility with a total of 190 team members.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber futures fell below $550 per thousand board feet, hovering at yearly lows

Trading Economics
May 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures fell below $550 per thousand board feet, hovering at yearly lows as excess supply from winter restocking collided added to a decline in demand. A 14.2% drop in U.S. single-family housing starts to an annualized 940,000 units in March, pushed new-home inventories to nearly eight months of supply. While a federal directive to raise timber production from public lands by 25% may ease constraints in the long term, the 90-day pause on new reciprocal tariffs has removed near-term urgency for buyers to cover import risks. At the same time, expectations of sharply higher anti-dumping duties on Canadian lumber have prompted mills to hold back supply, further pressuring prices as domestic inventories accumulate and demand remains subdued despite the onset of the spring building season.

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Lumber Prices Ease as Uncertainty Settles Despite Prices Settling

By Vincent Salandro
Builder Magazine
May 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Uncertainty over international trade barriers has caused significant fluctuations in lumber prices in recent months, according to Keta Kosman, publisher of Madison’s Lumber Reporter. “The whipsaw fatigue of conflicting tariff announcements over two months had Western Canadian suppliers hoping to see the market settle down,” Kosman. …Some stakeholders held off on buying lumber altogether, while others ordered early in hopes of securing delivery ahead of any potential trade restrictions. “Others decidedly switched their purchasing to Southern Yellow Pine from SPF,” Kosman says. …Data from the WWPA indicates US sawmills were running at only 67% of full capacity in January, compared to 72% for the full-year 2024. In Canada, sawmill utilization was 74% of capacity, down just one percentage point compared to the previous year. …“At this time, there is significant lumber supply able to come back online at existing facilities should demand improve into the summer.”

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Boise Cascade reports Q1, 2025 net income of $40.3 million

Boise Cascade Company
May 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

BOISE, Idaho – Boise Cascade reported net income of $40.3 million on sales of $1.5 billion for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025, compared with net income of $104.1 million on sales of $1.6 billion for the first quarter ended March 31, 2024. …Wood Products’ sales, including sales to Building Materials Distribution (BMD), decreased $53.1 million, or 11%, to $415.8 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025, from $468.9 million for the three months ended March 31, 2024. The decrease in sales was driven by lower sales prices and sales volumes for LVL and I-joists. In addition, lower plywood sales prices and sales volumes also contributed to the decrease in sales. …Nate Jorgensen, CEO said “As we move through the second quarter and better understand the underlying demand for 2025, we will be prepared and flexible as the economic situation changes.”

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Kansas builders face uncertain prices as U.S. and Canada ‘keep flexing their muscles’ on tariffs

By Morgan Chilson
Kansas Reflector
May 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

TOPEKA, Kansas — Building a new house in today’s market doesn’t yet mean extra dollars for lumber or manufactured wood products, but Kansas building supply managers warn that tariffs have driven up other construction costs. While on-again, off-again tariffs on Canadian timber are currently off, Kansans should prepare to pay more for just about everything else in the house, they said. “You take the hardware and the millwork portion of our business, and we’re getting daily price increases. …“Canada is the source of upwards of 80% of our lumber, so that’s a huge issue for the homebuilding industry in particular,” he said. …“I would say pretty much 99.9% of all the builders we deal with have language in their contracts for increases due to market conditions,” he said. “Unfortunately, the end user is the one that’s bearing the brunt of all these tariffs,” Robinson added.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Mark Carney’s bet on prefabricated homes has promise – and big risks

By Erica Alini
The Globe and Mail
May 5, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Prime Minister Carney has pledged billions of dollars in financing for makers of prefabricated homes to help end the country’s housing shortage. Experts say the plan is visionary – and laden with risks. Mr. Carney has promised to provide $25-billion in loans and $1-billion in equity financing for companies that largely build homes in factories rather than on construction sites. The federal government will also place bulk orders of prefabricated housing to help jump-start a nascent industry. …It’s a big, bold bet that could make it faster, cheaper and more environmentally friendly to build a chunk of the 3.5 million homes that Canada needs to add by 2030. But factories need sustained demand, a large enough market and streamlined production. That’s what must weave out of the web of housing bureaucracy and hyperlocal rules that currently tangles up residential construction, the experts caution. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

Related content:

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News from the Decorative Hardwoods Association

The Decorative Hardwoods Association
May 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Trade policy continues to be uncertain and changing rapidly in both the U.S. and Canada. Canada recently issued a surtax remission for decorative hardwoods imported from the U.S. Trade representatives from Taiwan and Japan, among others, have visited the U.S. to discuss tariff deals, while others, including Vietnam, have had phone conversations. DHA is closely monitoring the outcomes of the discussions and their impacts on our industry. We’ll talk more about the details at our upcoming annual meeting in San Antonio from May 13–May 15. All DHA members are encouraged to attend. Picking up on DHA efforts to push back on misleading marketing of fake wood products, the Missouri General Assembly has introduced legislation to counter the misleading marketing as “wood” for products like vinyl and laminate that only look like wood. Missouri Forest Products Association Executive Director Brian Brookshire will talk about the legislation at our annual meeting. Click the Read More for the full newsletter. 

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Embracing Material Intelligence: How the Pacific Northwest is Promoting Timber Innovation

By Olivia Poston
Arch Daily
May 5, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Sea to Sky Gondola in SquamishMaterial intelligence refers to how materials perform, adapt, and interact with ecological and cultural systems. It considers howstone, steel, or timber respond to intertangled forces, how those materials are sourced and assembled, and how they persist after demolition. Designers are centering material intelligence in constructing our cities in a generation of environmental uncertainty and strained supply chains. Few materials embody this shift as vividly as cross-laminated timber (CLT). By layering and bonding planks into structural panels, CLT offers strength, fire resistance, and a significantly lower carbon footprint than concrete or steel. Across Europe and Canada, mass timber has emerged as a centerpiece of decarbonized construction. Yet in the United States, progress has moved more slowly. Developers hesitate. Codes trail behind innovation. Conventional materials still dominate the urban skyline.

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Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council News & Views

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
May 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The May News & Views includes the following headlines: 

  • 5 Things to Know About OECMs in Canadian Forests
  • Public Consultation of FSC-STD-50-001: Requirements for Use of FSC® Trademarks by Certificate Holders
  • Join FSC for webinars on the FSC Principles, Criteria, and Indicators revision
  • New podcast episode out: Demystifying FSC Chain of Custody audits
  • FSC North America at the International Mass Timber Conference

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Forests taking longer to recover from severe ‘megafires’ since 2010

By Orla Dwyer
Carbon Brief
May 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The research, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, finds a “significant increase” in the severity of forest fires from 2001-10 to 2010-21 – especially in western North America, parts of Siberia and south-eastern Australia. It also finds that recovery from large fires has become “more difficult” for forests in recent years, particularly in the boreal forests of the far-northern latitudes.  Furthermore, fewer than one-third of all forests studied recovered successfully within seven years of a “megafire” – a broad term used to refer to extreme fires. A “surprising discovery” was that fire severity had the largest impact on forest recovery – even more than climate change, one of the study authors tells Carbon Brief. One researcher, who was not involved in the study, notes that the findings are “expected, but not previously reported on such a large scale”.

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Walk the Vanier Nature Park Garry Oak Restoration Project

Comox Valley Record
May 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Comox Valley Naturalists (CVN) invites the public to a forest of knowledge and a natural urban adventure on Saturday May 17 between 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. A series of one hour guided walks will take place in the City of Courtenay Vanier Nature Park off Vanier Drive, where a new Garry oak restoration project is underway. This project is being co-managed by CVN and the City of Courtenay. Choose between three walk times that each have a different leader who will share their expertise about Garry oak trees, forest ecosystems and the ongoing work in the park. This project has funding from CVN, the City of Courtenay and Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation.

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FREE Mini Conference WildFire Risk Reduction for Golden and Area A

Golden and Area A Firesmart
May 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Join us for field site visits on May 13 and an action packed day. Guests are welcome to come to one, some or all of the events listed below!

12:30 to 1:15 PM — Meet at the Golden Civic Centre to Register for Field Site Options. Locations will showcase examples of wildfire risk reduction treatments. Speak to experts about the treatments, the challenges and outcomes.
3:00 to 6:00 PM — Open House Golden Civic Centre. Your local government Firesmart coordinators, Wildfire Risk Reduction practitioners and local businesses will showcase how they are helping to ready Golden and Area A in case of wildfire.
7:00 to 9:00 PM — Speaker’s Panel at the Golden Civic Centre. Landscape Ecologist, Paul Hessburg ; UBC’s Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, Jennifer Baron; Professional Forester Lindsay Hill, of Forsite Consultants; and Superintendent-Cultural and Prescribed Fire Program with the BC Wildfire Service, Fons Raedschelders.

For updates and information – Please visit the Golden and Area A, Community FireSmart Facebook Page

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Trump Budget Proposal Portends Deep Cuts to Public Lands

By Robert Chaney
The Mountain Journal
May 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Taking aim at “climate ideologies antithetical to the American way of life,” President Donald Trump’s proposed 2026 federal budget would reduce spending on public lands, shift some national park facilities and forest management to states, and consolidate federal wildland firefighting into a new service inside the Department of the Interior… If Congress approves the proposed budget, the cuts would go into effect on October 1, 2025, when the federal fiscal 2026 budget year begins… Trump’s budget recommends $4.7 billion in cuts department-wide, including $1.4 billion from Forest Service activities and research… “The President has pledged to manage national forests for their intended purpose of producing timber,” the letter states, but it reduces Forest Service salaries by $342 million, eliminates the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program’s $50 million allocation, and reduces “funding for recreation, vegetation and watershed management, and land management regulation.” It also recommends “transferring smaller, lesser visited parks to State and tribal governments.”

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Alaskans fight to save timber industry

By Pedro Gonzalez
Must Read Alaska
May 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Sergei Vasilievich Rachmaninoff was perhaps the last of the great pianist-composers whose line stretched back to Mozart and Beethoven. The kind of musician whose craft demanded instruments of commensurate quality, the world’s finest pianos: Steinway & Sons. Rachmaninoff called them “perfect in every way.” Part of that perfection was owed to the uniquely excellent acoustic qualities of the Sitka spruce used to build the soundboards. But not just any tree will do. To achieve its trademark warm, rich tone, Steinway requires spruce sourced from Alaska’s Tongass National Forest, which is today supplied exclusively by Viking Lumber. Located on Prince of Wales Island, it is one of the last sawmills standing in the state and the only one in the U.S. capable of meeting Steinway’s needs. Now, Viking is threatened with extinction by the caprice of the U.S. Forest and Wildlife Service.

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Protect New Hampshire’s timber industry, North Country towns and taxpayers

By Tom Brady, Raymond Gorman and Robert Théberge – Coos County Commissioners
New Hampshire Union Leader
May 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

NEW HAMPSHIRE yield tax on timber, often called the “timber tax,” was established in 1949 and has been locally collected to offset property taxes ever since. …The yield tax on timber has been an essential tool for promoting conservation, helping the timber industry, and stabilizing municipal revenues in heavily timbered towns. …The legislation would, “…encourage conservation of the forest resources of [New Hampshire] by releasing growing wood and timber from the yearly burden of local property taxes and substituting a yield tax….” The timber tax has been very effective achieving these goals… The current policy strikes an excellent balance between industry and conservation. There is a new government-promoted industry threatening New Hampshire’s timber industry, loggers, timber processors, and heavily timbered towns that depend on timber tax revenues. Carbon credits.

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Government remains on track to ban full Farm-to-Forest conversions

By Honourable Todd McClay
The Government of New Zealand
May 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Agriculture and Forestry Minister Todd McClay has confirmed that restrictions on full farm-to-forest conversions on LUC 1-6 farmland will be in place this year, and reaffirmed that they will take effect from 4 December 2024 – the date of the original announcement. Enabling legislation will be introduced to Parliament during Q2 of this year. “The Government is focused on maintaining strong food and fibre production while supporting sustainable land use. We remain concerned about the effect that farm conversions are having on highly productive land — particularly sheep and beef farms in Northland, the East Coast and parts of Otago and Southland,” Mr McClay says. The new rules, now progressing through Cabinet, will ensure balance and recognise the value of both forestry and farming, while providing certainty for our food producers.

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Tech on the treetops: How AI can protect forests

TechXplore
May 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the newest tool in the arsenal to prevent the degradation and depletion of forests, with new research revealing how the technology can help protect the ecosystem. Charles Darwin University (CDU) researchers have collaborated on an international study, led by the University of Sri Lanka, to develop an AI model which detects changes in forest cover, or the amount of land surface covered by trees. According to the United Nations, between 2000 and 2022 there was a net forest area loss of 100 million hectares. Researchers took U-Net architecture—which is used for image segmentation often in biomedical image analysis—and adapted it to compare past and present pictures of the ecosystem and detect where forest loss has occurred. This custom model was fed a dataset of images from Google Earth and was able to detect forest cover changes with an accuracy of 94.37%.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Sustainable Biomass Program Publishes Two Interim Regional Risk Assessments

By Melanie Wedgbury
Sustainable Biomass Program
May 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Sustainable Biomass Program (SBP) has today announced the publication of two Interim Regional Risk Assessments (RRAs), covering British Columbia and Alberta Forests, Canada (available here). These Interim RRAs developed in accordance with the RRA Procedure v2.0, will support Certificate Holders in implementing risk mitigation measures and enable Certification Bodies to certify them until SBP-endorsed RRAs for these regions are available. The publication of these Interim RRAs is a direct outcome of SBP’s Standards Development Process, launched in May 2020, which led to the revision of SBP Standards 1 and 2. This revision necessitated a review of all existing SBP-endorsed RRAs and initiated the development of new ones.

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US Department of Agriculture Acts to Boost Timber Production, Reduce Wildfire Risk

US Department of Agriculture
May 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

U.S. Department of Agriculture today announced $23 million in grants to support transporting hazardous fuels – such as dead or downed trees – from national forests to processing facilities. Through the USDA Forest Service’s Hazardous Fuels Transportation Program, these grants will reduce the hazardous fuels that pose wildfire threats to communities, critical infrastructure and recreation areas… Unlike high-value wood, which is typically used in construction and furniture manufacturing, low-value wood has more limited applications, with fewer facilities able to process it into useful products like soil-enriching materials, renewable energy sources like electricity and heat, and sustainable construction solutions such as cross-laminated timber. The Hazardous Fuels Transportation Program aims to help businesses, non-profits, and state, local and tribal governments make use of the dead trees, fallen branches, and dense undergrowth which would go to waste or fuel catastrophic wildfires.

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European Space Agency unveils longest-ever dataset on forest biomass

Phys.Org
May 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

As the new Biomass satellite settles into life in orbit following its launch on April 29, ESA has released its most extensive satellite-based maps of above-ground forest carbon to date. Spanning nearly two decades, the dataset offers the clearest global picture yet of how forest carbon stocks have changed over time. Developed through ESA’s Climate Change Initiative, this new long-term record integrates data from multiple satellite missions—and will soon be further enhanced by data from the Biomass mission itself. It tracks the carbon-rich woody parts of vegetation, mainly trunks and branches, across the globe for different years between 2007 and 2022, at resolutions ranging from 100 m to 50 km. Importantly, it is tailored to support climate and carbon modeling, forest management, and national greenhouse-gas reporting activities as part of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Paris Agreement.

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United Nations Study Urges Focus on Boreal Forests

Mirage News
May 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Representing 27% of all forests worldwide, boreal forests are the planet’s terrestrial “second lung” after tropical forests. Encircling the North Pole, they span North America, Europe, and Asia, playing a vital role in global carbon sequestration and storage, biodiversity, and supporting societies and economies. Despite their importance, boreal forests do not receive the same visibility and attention among policymakers and the public as their tropical forest counterparts. A new study published by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), presented today at the United Nations Forum on Forests in New York, highlights the urgent need to increase the understanding of this global “treasure trove” and to safeguard its important contributions… Boreal forests, like other forest biomes, are important to global goals such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 8, 12, 13 and 15, the six Global Forest Goals and the Targets of the United Nations Strategic Plan for Forests 2030.

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There Is No Solution to Climate Change, Biodiversity Loss Without Healthy Forests

The United Nations
May 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The United Nations Forum on Forests commenced its twentieth session today, as speakers spotlighted the connection between healthy forests and a sustainable future, the increasing threats to this important global resource and the subsequent need to invest in its protection despite a shrinking fiscal space. The Forum will hold its twentieth session from 5 to 9 May in New York. Established in 2000 by the Economic and Social Council, the Forum has universal membership and is tasked with reviewing progress in the implementation of sustainable forest management. This session — a technical one — will focus on Global Forest Goals 1 (reversing forest loss), 3 (protecting forests and using sustainable forest products) and 5 (promoting inclusive forest governance). “This Forum is unique,” observed Ismail Belen (Türkiye), Chair of the Forum’s twentieth session — noting that “it is the only global intergovernmental platform with universal membership that focuses on all forest-related issues”.

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Forest Fires

Uptick in active wildfires is caused by ‘spring dip,’ say B.C. fire officers

Canadian Press in CBC News
May 5, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The number of wildfires in British Columbia has roughly doubled over the past several days, but an information officer with the BC Wildfire Service says the activity can be attributed to the annual “spring dip.” Amanda Graves says the phenomenon is caused by a decrease in moisture in the needles of coniferous trees. She says it comes shortly after the snow has melted, but before vegetation “begins to get really green.” But Graves says it’s too soon to say whether recent fires are an indicator of what’s to come this wildfire season. The BC Wildfire Service dashboard shows there were 46 active fires as of midday Monday, six of which started in the previous 24 hours and 80 per cent of which were human-caused. Graves noted that B.C. doesn’t typically get much lightning at this time of year, which explains why most fires in the spring are human-caused.

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Evacuations underway due to wildfire in the regional municipality of Garden River

By Jason Kerr
The Prince Albert Daily Herald
May 5, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Saskatchewan—A few evacuations are taking place and Hwy 55 has been closed in both directions due to a wildfire that started in the west side of the RM of Garden River on Monday. The majority of the fire is in the Nisbet Forest up to Hwy 55, RM of Garden River reeve Ryan Scragg said during a brief interview Monday evening. “(The) conditions are really windy and it’s developing very quickly here,” Scragg said. “Some evacuations have been ordered and they’re being carried out by the RCMP.” Scragg said the conditions are ripe for a fire. Fire bans are in place for the RM of Garden River, the RM of Buckland, and the RM of Prince Albert. The City of Prince Albert has also issued a fire ban for areas within city limits north of the river. Scragg said it was difficult to estimate the number of firefighters they have on scene.

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Out-of-control wildfire sparks Sturgeon County to declare local state of emergency

By Nicholas Frew
CBC News
May 4, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

An out-of-control wildfire in Sturgeon County, Alta., has burned down one house, scattered animals and forced residents to standby ready to evacuate. The county issued an evacuation notice Saturday evening, warning residents to prepare to flee in case conditions worsen. Shortly after midnight, the county declared a state of local emergency. “We’re just keeping people safe and trying to protect property,” Mayor Alanna Hnatiw told CBC Radio’s Daybreak Alberta on Sunday. The evacuation notice affects people living around the Redwater Provincial Recreation Area, about 60 kilometres northeast of Edmonton. Late Saturday night, RCMP issued news releases saying officers from multiple departments were responding. Emergency personnel were helping people evacuate, but police didn’t specify how many.

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