Daily News for April 24, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

Canada says Canadian forestry investments in the US South should be viewed positively by US Section 232 investigation

Tree Frog Forestry News
April 24, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway
Region: International

Canada says Canadian forestry investments in the US South should be viewed positively by US Section 232 investigation. In related news: US trade policies create uncertainty for Canada’s forest sector; amid uncertainty—BC invests $11M in four wood product manufacturers; and a webinar to help contractors manage tariff impacts. Meanwhile: a look inside Gorman’s West Kelowna mill; what the closure of IP’s Georgetown mill says about fluff pulp; and US roofing contractors say they are delaying projects.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: Canadian Forest Owners seek clarity from the political parties; firefighting drones could change the way BC fights wildfires; ENGO’s want BC to refocus on old-growth; Trump and California find common ground on forestry; New Jersey lifts its wildfire evacuation order; and the US Fix Our Forests Act called forest malpractice.

Finally, Wood Solutions Conference comes to Halifax, and the Softwood Lumber Board’s 2024 Annual Report. 

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Canadian softwood producers highlight American investments as U.S. probes lumber imports

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Major softwood producers with head offices in Canada say they have accounted for more than half of the growth in capacity in the US South over the past decade, highlighting their American investments as the Trump administration investigates lumber imports. The US South appeals to forestry companies because of the region’s abundant timber, the Canadian government said in a 57-page filing this month to the US Department of Commerce in a bid to avert potential tariffs. …In seeking to stave off tariffs, the Canadian government and several producers from Canada believe that the foray into the US South should be viewed as evidence of them being aligned with the Trump administration’s “America First” trade and investment agenda. …However, the U.S. Lumber Coalition is arguing that new tariffs are necessary. …Canadian producers are worried that if new lumber tariffs hit 25 per cent… total levies could reach nearly 60%. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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US trade policies cast shadow of uncertainty over Canadian forestry industry

By Rosa Saba
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump’s shifting trade policies are creating uncertainty for the Canadian forestry industry. Sean McLaren, CEO of West Fraser Timber, says the potential inflationary effects of tariffs could weigh on future demand. “Looking forward, we see considerable macroeconomic uncertainty, particularly stemming from the US’s evolving tariff policies”. He said the company is planning for multiple scenarios. …RBC’s Matthew McKellar said that the outlook for the paper and forest products industry is highly uncertain when it comes to demand. “All of this uncertainty is bad for business,” said Derek Nighbor, CEO of Forest Products Association of Canada. Nighbor added that any impact on Canadian lumber companies will also affect pulp and paper: “We’ve got all of these downstream industries that depend on those inputs.” …McKellar noted that companies like West Fraser, Interfor and Canfor are geographically diverse, meaning potential softening of demand could be the bigger concern.

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Canadian Forest Owners Asks Political Parties About Their Commitments to Canada’s 480,000 Woodlot Owners and Their Families

By Andrew de Vries
Canadian Forest Owners
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) reached out to the five federal political parties with current representation in parliament to ask how their party would support the thousands of rural communities across Canada where these forest owners live. Canadian Forest Owners represents 480,000 private forest owners from Prince Edward Island to Vancouver Island. These forest owners are largely family owned, small business, who own over a tenth of Canada’s managed forests, supporting every mill across the country, and accounting for nearly 20 percent of Canada’s total forest production. Private forest landowners provide solutions to climate change and real socio-economic development opportunities in rural communities from coast to coast. Here’s what they had to say…

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A look inside West Kelowna’s iconic Gorman Bros. Lumber mill

By Shannon Ainslie
InfoTel News
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Anyone travelling between West Kelowna and Peachland has passed the decades-old Gorman Bros. sawmill with its teal sided warehouses and tidy stacks of lumber. This video takes viewers on an educational tour through the facility as logs travel through the noisy sawmill, are dried in a kiln and sent to the planer to have the final finishing done. The logs come out of the process as smooth, beautiful boards ready to be packaged and shipped, while the wood waste is repurposed.

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B.C. supports advanced manufacturing of forestry products

By Ministry of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation
Government of British Columbia
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

New support for forestry-sector manufacturers in the province is creating sustainable jobs, strengthening local supply chains, establishing new made-in-B.C. products and reinforcing B.C.’s position as a leader in mass-timber innovation. …Through the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund (BCMJF), the Government of B.C. is contributing as much as $11 million toward four forestry-sector capital projects in the province. The projects are helping B.C.-based forestry-product manufacturers grow their businesses by constructing new production facilities, purchasing new equipment and adding new high-value product lines, while creating and protecting hundreds of jobs.

  • Spearhead Timberworks Inc., will received $7.5 million to drive its expansion. 
  • Westlam Industries Ltd. will receive $1.5 million to construct a new production facility and install new equipment.
  • Mercer Celgar Limited Partnership will receive $1.75 million to modernize its small-log line to process smaller-diameter logs and a wider range of low-grade fibre.
  • Greyback Construction Ltd., will receive $235,000 to begin production of prefabricated exterior walls and floors.

Canadian Press in the CBC News: B.C. invests $11 million on value-added lumber manufacturing amid U.S. uncertainty

Castanet, by Timothy Schafer: Province contributes cash through Jobs Fund to help value-added wood manufacturers

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Driving Innovation, Expanding Opportunities: The Softwood Lumber Board 2024 Annual Report Is Now Available

The Softwood Lumber Board
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Softwood Lumber Board (SLB) recently published its 2024 Annual Report, which details the organization’s impact generating more softwood lumber demand by expanding new and emerging markets and protecting existing markets. “The SLB and its funded programs—the AWC, Think Wood, WoodWorks, and SLB Education—are putting the lumber industry in a stronger position than ever before,” said SLB President & CEO Cees de Jager. “Despite a challenging market for multifamily and nonresidential construction, the SLB delivered strong demand growth for the industry in 2024, generating 1.6 billion board feet of incremental demand and influencing 1,498 projects, representing 66 million square feet.” Since 2012, the SLB and its partners have cumulatively generated more than 15.3 billion board feet in demand, equating to an average return of 86 incremental board feet for every $1 invested. In 2024, the SLB continued to target investments across its key program areas of codes, communications, conversions, and education through its funded programs, partnerships and initiatives. 

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Finance & Economics

If high bond yields persist, timberland may find itself in a vexed position

By Russ Taylor, Russ Taylor Global
Global Consulting Alliance
April 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

Following the US government’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcements on April 2, 2025, the bond market experienced significant turmoil. …If high bond yields persist, timberland may find itself in a vexed position—caught between its traditional role as a real biological asset and inflation hedge, and its declining relative appeal compared to more liquid bonds offering higher returns. To remain competitive in this environment, timberland may face pressure to support higher discount rates, which could weigh on valuations. Additionally, tariff escalations and geopolitical tensions could disrupt wood product exports, further increasing risk. …The World Trade Organization (WTO) warned that the US tariffs could reverse global goods trade growth in 2025, reducing it from a projected 2.7% increase to a 0.2% decline. In a worst-case scenario, global trade could decline by 1.5%, weakening GDP growth to just 1.7%. …The unpredictability of current trade policy shifts is making reliable forecasting difficult.

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New Home Sales Rise in March

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
April 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

A modest decline in mortgage rates and lean existing inventory helped boost new home sales in March even as builders and consumers contend with uncertain market conditions. Sales of newly built, single-family homes in March increased 7.4% to a 724,000 seasonally adjusted annual rate from a revised January number, according to newly released data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. Census Bureau. The pace of new home sales in March was up 6.0% compared to a year earlier. The March new home sales data shows that demand continues to be present in the market, provided affordability conditions permit a purchase. An increase in economic certainty would be a big boost to future sales conditions. Lower mortgage interest rates helped boost the pace of new home sales in March.

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What the closure of International Paper’s fluff pulp mill says about the direction of the market

ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
April 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

The closure of International Paper’s Georgetown mill, which represented approximately 5% of US fluff pulp production, has sparked renewed interest in the underlying drivers of change within the fluff pulp sector. While it might be tempting to view this move as part of a larger market correction due to factors such as oversupply, the data suggests a different story. The shutdown is more accurately seen as a strategic decision tied to cost optimization and shifting corporate priorities rather than a response to excess global capacity. Contrary to the notion of global oversupply, fluff pulp capacity has remained relatively stable over the past decade. …The closure underscores a confluence of evolving cost structures and operational realities. Older sites like Georgetown, face growing challenges from energy costs, labor, and environmental compliance. Georgetown ranked among the highest-risk fluff pulp mills based on cost position and technical age.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Listen to UBC researchers play a guitar made of sustainable mahogany

CBC News
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

University of B.C. forestry professor Phil Evans and PhD student Joseph Kim say that mahogany trees were logged heavily, to the point that the species is now considered endangered. The scientists argue that making musical instruments out of mahogany wood produces superior results.

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Legal and practical strategies for contractors to manage tariff impacts

By Don Procter
The Daily Commercial News
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

CALGARY — The one constant of Trump’s tariff plan seems to be that it is in a constant state of flux. “The time is now to start planning for what those impacts could possibly be and develop the mitigation strategies and tracking mechanisms…so that as they (tariffs) evolve in real time you are prepared to deal with them,” said Rick Moffat. Moffat moderated a webinar panel recently on legal and practical strategies for managing the impacts of the tariffs on construction projects in Canada. …Stressing the importance of detailed contingency plans that account for potential cost hikes caused by tariffs, Bulut Cinar said contractors would benefit by including “multiple scenarios” illustrating how their contingencies help manage their costs. …If contractors consider delay-causing tariffs a force majeure event, but the contract deals with tariffs differently they might be “precluding themselves” from compensation, he added.

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Province provides $7.5 million for proposed Spearhead development near Nelson

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The province announced $7.5 million in support funding today for Spearhead Timberworks Inc. for a proposed new facility and to advance its glulam technology, a move expected to create 60 jobs. …“These investments couldn’t come at a more critical time,” said Parmar. … Spearhead applied to the Regional District of Central Kootenay (RDCK) to rezone three lots adjacent to its existing facility, which they have operated since 1998. The project would bring 60 new jobs to Nelson and will now be supported in part by the provincial government. …Community members have pushed back on the expansion efforts, expressing concerns about the potential impact on nearby aquifers, noise pollution and the potentially increased trucking traffic on Highway 3A. Many residents have urged the company to build the additional facilities in another location to preserve the rural landscape in which the current facilities reside.

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Québec builder creates ‘a world first’ aluminium volumetric apartment project

By John Bleasby
Journal of Commerce
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Construction Éco-bâtiment, a family-owned company in Brossard, Qué., explored possibilities for volumetric modular for their multi-unit affordable housing project northwest of Montréal. …Éco-Bâtiment had been looking for a different construction method … not based on concrete with its high carbon footprint or on wood with its longevity and health problems for occupants such as mold and warping. Furthermore, it would be a construction process that would create less waste materials sent to landfills. Éco-bâtiment turned to ACAL System, a volumetric modular builder based in Québec that specializes in aluminium-framed units. …The collaboration between Construction Éco-bâtiment and ACAL resulted in what Miguel Vaillancourt, president of Construction Éco-bâtiment, called “a world-first” — a six-unit, three-storey residential complex named Lofts de l’Aluminium. The modules were built with such exact precision that the units were assembled onsite in just one day. 

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Save the Date: Wood Solutions Conference Halifax | Nov 19–20, 2025

Canadian Wood Council
April 24, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

Mark your calendars! WoodWorks Atlantic and the Canadian Wood Council are pleased to present the Wood Solutions Conference in Halifax this fall — and we want you there. Join us November 19–20, 2025, at the Lord Nelson Hotel & Suites for Atlantic Canada’s premier event dedicated to wood design and construction. This two-day conference and trade show will feature expert-led seminars, cutting-edge innovations, and valuable networking opportunities for professionals in architecture, engineering, and construction. Full conference details and registration info coming soon. Whether you’re focused on sustainability, looking to expand your toolkit, or just want to see what’s possible with wood, this is an event you won’t want to miss.

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Trade War Fallout: Contractors Are Delaying Projects and Cutting Crews

By Bryan Gottlieb
Roofing Contractor
April 24, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

A new survey of industrial professionals highlights the significant impact of President Trump’s tariffs and immigration policies on the building envelope and related manufacturing. The survey’s findings offer the clearest picture yet of the widespread dissatisfaction that the tariffs are causing for businesses throughout the building envelope. This includes reduced profit margins, delayed projects, and workforce cuts in construction — effects particularly felt by roofing and exterior contractors amid tight labor markets and rising material costs. Industry data show that tariffs on steel, aluminum and lumber have driven up input prices by double-digit percentages, delayed deliveries on job sites, and added roughly $9,000 – $10,000 to the cost of a typical single-family home. At the same time, stricter immigration enforcement has reduced the pool of experienced installers — nearly one-quarter of construction workers are foreign-born, which puts further upward pressure on wages and project timelines.

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Forestry

Squamish Nation hope to be recognized as part of Stanley Park

By Min Kerr-Lazenby
CTV News
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) is calling for better education on Stanley Park’s Indigenous history after a First Nations group threw their connection into question during a logging protest earlier this month. A “sacred fire” lit March 15 was kept ablaze for over a month at Brockton Park’s totem poles by a woman who identified, according to protest group Save Stanley Park, as a “matriarch” of the land. The woman claimed to be a descendent of “Portuguese Joe”, an early B.C. settler with Musqueam lineage, and was in protest of the Vancouver Park Board’s ongoing project to remove hundreds of trees affected by the looper moth disease. Squamish Nation elected councillor Wilson Williams says the claims are still yet to be verified, and his own community is left reeling at the group’s failure to address the history of the Squamish people that dates back thousands of years within the park.

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Environmental groups want BC to refocus measures to protect old-growth forests

My Coast Now
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) and Endangered Ecosystems Alliance (EEA) are calling for better protection of old-growth forests from the BC Government. [They want the] province to refocus their measures, implement their draft biodiversity, and Ecosystem Health Framework to ensure a transition to a sustainable forest industry. Executive Director of EEA Ken Wu said there is two directions the government can go in response to tariff threats from the U.S. “Either take the easy but foolish route by falling back on the destructive status quo of old-growth logging and raw low exports, or instead take the opportunity to invest in a modernized, sustainable, value-added, second-growth forest industry that is the future of forestry in BC, while protecting the last old-growth forests.” …The groups are also issuing a warning which commercial logging must not be permitted in protected areas under the guise of wildfire risk reduction.

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A Tsilhqot’in First Nation builds capacity as fire season begins

By Ruth Lloyd
Clearwater Times
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Xeni Gwet’in First Nation is building capacity in a remote part of the Chilcotin Plateau as the wildfire season gets underway. The Tin Towh crew is an experienced forestry crew with Xeni Gwet’in, a community a three hour drive south-west of Williams Lake. Along with a lot of work doing fuel management, the crew is also continuing to build their skills as firefighters. Alexis Stowards is the crew coordinator, working both in the field and in the office, and Steve Quilt is the crew supervisor, overseeing field work. Based in the remote Nemaiah Valley, Tin Towh, which loosely translates to “in the woods” in Tsilhqot’in, the crew was well-positioned to respond to a fire reported on April 21. The fire was approximately three hectares and was located in an area about 20 km west of the Xeni Gwet’in community.

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Firefighting drones could change the way B.C. fights wildfires, especially during the night

By Denise Ryan
Vancouver Sun
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

[Alex Deslauriers watched the Downton Lake wildfire in 2023 where his home was destroyed by the fire.] Since then, Deslauriers, an aerospace engineer, has been focused on just one thing: how to make sure it never happens again. …He shifted his entire career, almost overnight, to solving the problem. …Now there is: firefighting drones. …Now his company, FireSwarm Solutions, is adapting a Swedish-made jet engine-powered heavy-lift UAV (Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle) to fight wildfires. FireSwarm has partnered with Strategic Natural Resource Group, an Indigenous-owned company based in Prince George that specializes in forestry, emergency response and remote site development, to bring the drones to the frontlines of firefighting. …Rapid wildfire growth at night is an emerging phenomenon that has become increasingly problematic… That nighttime gap in firefighting response is exactly what Deslauriers wanted to address

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Tree of Heaven Serves as Devilish Host to Spotted Lanternfly

By the Agriculture Research Service
US Department of Agriculture
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Agriculture Research Service researchers are helping to mitigate a destructive tree and insect that continue to spread across the United States. With its lush tropical canopy and ability to quickly grow toward the sky, the Tree of Heaven seems as angelic as its name suggests. However, Tree of Heaven is proving to be a devil. The invasive tree is aggressive and damaging as it spreads rapidly across Mid-Atlantic and Midwestern states. …Not only is Tree of Heaven an environmental menace, it is also “the most favored host” of the invasive spotted lanternfly, according to Tracy Leskey, a research entomologist in Kearneysville, WV. Leskey and university partners are working to reduce both Tree of Heaven and spotted lanternfly populations through ARS’ Area-Wide Pest Management program. Their goal is to suppress the populations of both invasive species … all while alleviating the impact on native pollinators and plants.

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Is there common ground for Gavin Newsom, Donald Trump on forestry? Timber!

By Tom Philip
The Sacramento Bee
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to cut down lots of little trees for fire protection. President Donald Trump wants loggers to cut down bigger California trees for lumber. Between these two oft-warring leaders, is there a policy marriage of sorts in the woods? At first blush, the answer appears to be yes. The governor wants to reduce the fire dangers on a million California acres a year. The president wants to increase timber harvests by 25% on the state’s national forests. On paper, these two agendas are entirely compatible. But it’s one thing to order more trees to fall in a national forest. It’s another to plan for large-scale forestry operations, which takes staff and time. Trump’s team so far has shown more interest in cutting forestry staffing in California than cutting down trees. And that may stall any real changes on the ground. [to access the full story, a Sacramento Bee subscription is required]

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Sen. Curtis’ bill is the opposite of ‘fixing’ our forests

By Brian Moench, president, Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment
Utah News Dispatch
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

During the Vietnam War, an American officer referred to the U.S. military’s decision to bomb a town of 35,000 people, saying, “It became necessary to destroy the town to save it.” This quote comes to mind when examining a bill sponsored by Utah Sen. John Curtis, ironically named “Fix Our Forests Act,” S.1462, (FOFA). It should be renamed “We Have to Destroy our Forests to Save Them Act”. The bill is forest malpractice, climate malpractice, and public health malpractice. Sen. Curtis’s S. 1462 is a legislative enactment of Trump’s recent executive order to dramatically ramp up logging on federal lands, exempting 60% of national forest lands from meaningful environmental analysis and public participation under the pretense of a wildfire “emergency.” Remember Donald Trump is the environmental expert that insists the climate crisis is a hoax, and attributed Western forest fires to insufficient raking of the forest floors.

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How new financial models for forest restoration create opportunities for nature, communities and investors

By M. Sanjayan, Conservation International
World Economic Forum
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The age of forest restoration has arrived. Between 1990 and 2020, our planet lost 420 million hectares of forest cover, with grave consequences for climate, biodiversity and resource security. For years, large-scale restoration efforts were hindered by concerns around cost-effectiveness and results — but science has come a long way. Yields are higher, and the cost is lower. Advances in methods for measuring carbon storage, creating three-dimensional maps of forest, planting and surveying wildlife populations have removed technical impediments. Now, new financial models are removing the final barrier to large-scale restoration. Philanthropy alone cannot restore, rewild and conserve hundreds of millions of hectares, especially in tropical systems in the global south. …We must find ways to unlock private capital for restoration. Fortunately, commercial restoration projects are now under way across the world and forward-thinking companies are building a strong business case for investing in nature.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canadian carbon credit firm sues former executives for US$40M, alleging fraud and ‘unjust enrichment’

By Jeff Lagerquist
Yahoo! Finance
April 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

A Canadian carbon credit firm is seeking more than US$40 million in damages in a lawsuit against its former CEO and several ex-directors and associates over alleged unjust enrichment, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty. A statement of claim filed in the Ontario Superior Court by Carbon Streaming Corporation describes diverted six-figure advisory fees, as well as lavish trips and retreats without a business purpose, over the span of multiple years. Toronto-based Carbon Streaming provides capital to carbon capture projects around the world via streaming or royalty agreements for carbon credits, which they sell to buyers looking to offset emissions, or other investors. …Last week, Carbon Streaming filed a lawsuit with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice against founder, former CEO and company director Justin Cochrane, as well as several other past executives, directors, consultants, and affiliated entities.

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Countries could use forests to ‘mask’ needed emission cuts: report

Associated Free Press in France 24
April 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The assessment singled out Brazil and Australia, and warned a lack of rules around accounting for forests and other land-based carbon sinks meant countries could “game the system” when reporting their national greenhouse gas emissions. Scientists are still unclear about how carbon sinks might behave as the planet warms in future, and exactly how much heat-trapping carbon dioxide they might soak up from the atmosphere. But that has not stopped countries from making their own assumptions and using those numbers in their national climate plans, which are due to be finalised to 2035 before the next UN climate talks in Brazil in November. Climate Analytics, a policy institute that independently assesses these plans, said overly optimistic assumptions about how much CO2 forests might draw down was “masking the scale and pace of the fossil fuel emissions cuts needed”.

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Health & Safety

Crews respond to leaking rail car at Saint John railway yard

By Andrew Bates
The Telegraph-Journal in Yahoo! News
April 23, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Saint John Fire Department’s hazardous materials team responded Wednesday to a “slow leak” of sulfuric acid from a rail car at a west-side Saint John rail yard. …The rail yard is owned by N.B. Southern Railway, a J.D. Irving company. Arrand said the hazmat team was called and firefighters established a 150-foot perimeter around the rail car while they waited for removal specialists from the Canadian Transport Emergency Centre and RST Transport to arrive. JDI VP of communications Anne McInerney said “All emergency procedures were followed,” and while it’s not confirmed how much acid leaked, the release occurred in a “very small area” and could not have been more than five litres. Arrand said that sulfuric acid presents an inhalation hazard, which was the reason for the perimeter.

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Forest Fires

New Jersey Cut Back on Prescribed Burns in the Pine Barrens—and Faces a Wildfire That Charred Thousands of Acres

By Anna Mattson
Inside Climate News
April 23, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US East

New Jersey has a million acres filled with towering pitch pines. …This week, a swath of the Pine Barrens went up in flames, a stark warning of what might be a treacherous fire season. About 11,500 acres were affected by a fire that started Tuesday morning in the Greenwood Forest Wildlife Management Area of Ocean County, New Jersey Forest Fire Service said midday Wednesday. The Garden State Parkway was shut down for miles as thick smoke wafted into neighborhoods and thousands of households and businesses were evacuated for hours and had power cuts. Social media updates from fire officials indicated 30 percent of the blaze was contained by Wednesday afternoon. Foresters had warned in March that New Jersey was particularly vulnerable to wildfires this year because of below average rains, near-drought conditions-–and a delay in prescribed burns by authorities that have typically helped to reduce risk.

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Evacuation orders lifted and portion of Garden State Parkway reopens as crews battle New Jersey wildfire

By Taylor Romine, Taylor Ward and Mary Gilbert
CNN
April 23, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US East

Weather conditions are improving Wednesday as firefighters continue to battle a still-growing wildfire that has burned at least 13,250 acres in southern New Jersey since it ignited on Tuesday, prompting about 5,000 evacuations and briefly shut down part of the Garden State Parkway. The fire started inside the Greenwood Forest Wildlife Management Area in Ocean County Tuesday morning and was 50% contained as of Wednesday evening, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service said. The cause is under investigation and a damage assessment is underway. …The fire is expected to grow even as firefighters make progress on containment. “This could very well end up being the largest wildfire in New Jersey in 20 years,” LaTourette said. Despite its large size, the fire destroyed a single commercial building in Ocean County and torched some nearby outbuildings and vehicles, but no homes were harmed, according to LaTourette.

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