Daily News for September 17, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

US builders are ‘cautious but hopeful’ as interest rate cut looms

The Tree Frog Forestry News
September 17, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway, Finance & Economics

US homebuilder confidence remains low as permits slide, but expectation of an interest rate cut boosts future sales expectations. In other Business news: the future of Domtar’s Glenwood, Arkansas sawmill is in question; and UPM extends its pulp mill closures in Finland. Meanwhile: AF&PA joins trade-group opposition to proposed US rail merger; and the American Journal of Transportation opines on Trump’s tariff war impact on trade, trucking and home ownership.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: Canada’s growing Wildland Urban Interface increases fire danger; what to know about the newly created US Wildland Fire Service; and wildfires continue to rage in Oregon’s Lane County; as fire bans are lifted for northern Vancouver Island. Meanwhile: Plilomath, Oregon adapts with mass timber; the Canadian Wood Council features Toronto’s Limberlost Place; and the BC Institute of Technology advances careers in the lumber and sawmill sector.

Finally, a US Lumber Coalition commentary claims most of lumber duties paid by Canadian mills will go into the US Treasury.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

US Lumber Coalition comments on 2019 antidumping order, says majority of $7.2B paid to date by Canadian mills will go US Treasury

The US Lumber Coalition
September 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Zoltan van Heyningen

WASHINGTON — The US Lumber Coalition supports Canada’s decision to drop its appeal of the second administrative review of the antidumping order in the trade case against unfairly traded softwood lumber imports from Canada. This step finalizes the total antidumping liability for Canadian softwood lumber producers who dumped their product into the US market in 2019. …“With the conclusion of this appeal, Canadian lumber producers will now owe US taxpayers an additional $236 million. That liability reflects the high level of dumping that occurred in 2019 and sets the stage for a total estimated payment of $760 million once the anti-subsidy portion of that review is completed,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director of the U.S. Lumber Coalition. To date, Canadian softwood lumber producers have paid an estimated $7.2 billion in duties as a result of their unfair trade practices, the majority of which will be liquidated into the US Treasury.

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Industry trade groups slam proposed rail merger

By Rachel Frazin
The Hill
September 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Trade associations representing various industries issued a letter Tuesday expressing “serious concerns” about a proposed merger between major rail companies Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific. “We write to express our serious concerns and reservations about the proposed merger between Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern,” said the letter, which came from trade associations representing manufacturing, chemical, energy and agriculture firms. “Past rail mergers have shown what happens when consolidation goes unchecked: service suffers, costs increase, and jobs disappear,” the trade groups wrote to the U.S. Surface Transportation Board. …The railroad companies, however, have argued that the merger will be a benefit to the country, improving efficiency and allowing for more routes. …In addition to the American Chemistry Council, signatories of the letter include the American Petroleum Institute, International Dairy Foods Association and the American Forest and Paper Association.

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Future of Domtar’s Glenwood sawmill in question after announcement

Southwest Arkansas News
September 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

GLENWOOD, Arkansas — Reports of a temporary shutdown at the Domtar Glenwood sawmill has left local residents wondering what the future holds for the mill. Word of the shutdown first came last week when Pike County Judge Eddie Howard… stated that Domtar officials had told him that a phased curtailment of the facility had begun immediately with the schedule showing everything would be down by Oct. 10. The judge added that he had been told that they would reevaluate the matter Dec. 1 with production possibly restarting at that time.Domtar officials said … it’s simply a question of supply and demand, and right now there’s way too much supply – interest rates and the economy have just led to less people building.” The sawmill, which employs approximately 150 people, could look to reopen after Dec. 1, but Howard said that could be tough assuming that their employees find other employment in the meantime.

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Tokoroa Plywood Plant Closure Looms, Union Says Decision ‘Fait Accompli’

Scoop New Zealand
September 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

New Zealand — Up to 119 jobs could go at Carter Holt Harvey’s Tokoroa factory, with locals calling the move devastating for the town. A union representing workers at Carter Holt Harvey’s Tokoroa plywood manufacturing plant says its closure will be devastating for the town. The company has begun consultation with staff on closing the plant and importing ply from overseas, with the loss of up to 119 full-time jobs. The proposed closure follows OJI Fibre Solutions cutting 130 jobs and closing the country’s last paper-making machine at nearby Kinleith in June this year. Red Middlemiss has been a union spokesperson at the ply plant for 23 years. He said Carter Holt Harvey can now make and import plywood from overseas for around 60 percent of what it costs to manufacture it locally.

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UPM extends Kaukas pulp mill shutdown to October 11 and plans Pietarsaari closure in November

UPM Fibres
September 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

HELSINKI, Finland – The maintenance shutdown of the UPM Kaukas pulp mill, which began in August, will be extended for two weeks until October 11, 2025. In addition, the UPM Pietarsaari pulp mill will be temporarily shut down for approximately two weeks in November. “We are focused on ensuring the profitability of our business. By curtailing our production, we adapt to the pulp market situation and high wood cost level”, says Petri Hakanen, Senior Vice President, UPM Fibres Finland Operations.

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Finance & Economics

Trucking and other transport impacted by lumber dispute

By Julie Gedeon
The American Journal of Transportation
September 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Higher duty rate and possible additional tariffs have transportation modes on edge. The softwood lumber dispute threatens to have repercussions on various transportation modes, particularly trucking. “Our members are saying their business is still okay, even with the softer rates due to mill overcapacity, but they’re worried that if anyone pushes on this wall with more tariffs, there’s nothing to hold it up,” says Dave Earle, the BC Trucking Association’s CEO. …Trucking has already been dealing with the overcapacity that was put in place for the greater demands for deliveries for most everything during the pandemic but has not subsided. …In terms of rail services, CPKC has seen its forest product shipments rise this year to date based on revenue ton miles. …At the Port of Vancouver in British Columbia, the potential to export more lumber is significant with approximately half of last year’s containers leaving the port empty.

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US-Canada dispute threatens supply and American homeownership availability

By Julie Gedeon
The American Journal of Transportation
September 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Major concerns are being expressed on both sides of the border regarding the higher US duties on Canada’s softwood lumber. …The current 35.19% duty, along with any steeper tariff, is detrimental to US homebuilders and homebuyers longer term, warns Rose Quint, of NAHB Survey Research. Higher mortgage rates of 6% to 7% since 2022 have already weakened housing demand and caused lumber prices to edge downwards. The real effect of tariffs might be delayed by wholesalers having stocked up building materials earlier in the year to avoid higher tariffs “Years of building above and beyond our traditional baseline is required to make up the 1.5 million deficit that we have in new housing units,” Quint adds. …Affordability challenges already existed and will be further worsened by the higher costs. …The overriding hope among the Canadian producers and American homebuilders is that a suitable agreement will be reached between the US and Canada. 

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2025 forest product trade trends

By George Lauriat, Editor in Chief
The American Journal of Transportation
September 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

…The all-out tariff war initiated by the Trump administration has thrown international trade into chaos and forest products are no exception and retaliation isn’t always in the form of more tariffs. For example, back in March the General Administration of Customs of China (GACC) announced it was banning the imports of US logs. GACC stated that these suspensions were in response to recent detections of forest pests such as bark beetles and longhorn beetles in US shipments. …On August 22nd President Trump announced that the administration would complete a Section 232 investigation into imported furniture within 50 days. …Of course, in July President Trump signed an executive order to impose a 50% tariff on imports from Brazil which also includes wood and wood products which took effect on August 6th. The main forest product exemption to the tariff is imported Brazilian wood pulp. …In the short term, confusion in the forest product sector is likely to continue.

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US Housing Starts Fall to Lowest Since May in Broad Decline

By Michael Sasso
Bloomberg Economics
September 17, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Housing starts in the US fell last month to the lowest since May, as bloated home inventory slowed builders’ appetites to boost production. New residential construction decreased 8.5% last month to an annualized rate of 1.31 million homes, government data released Wednesday showed. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economist was for 1.37 million starts. Meantime, starts of one-family homes fell 7% to an annualized 890,000, the lowest in more than a year. Multifamily construction, which has helped lift overall construction in recent months, also declined, falling nearly 12% to a three-month low. …Traders expect the Federal Reserve to trim interest rates multiple times this year, starting on Wednesday. And separate data out Wednesday showed mortgage rates fell last week to the lowest level in nearly a year, spurring a surge in refinancing.

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US Builders Stay Cautious as Single-Family Permits Extend Downtrend

By Danushka Nanayakkara-Skillington
NAHB Eye on Housing
September 15, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Single-family housing permits slipped for the seventh month in a row, highlighting affordability headwinds and weak demand. While multifamily permits ticked up, the sector’s volatility leaves the outlook uncertain. The split underscores a housing market still under strain, with single-family softness weighing on broader growth prospects. Over the first seven months of 2025, the total number of single-family permits issued year-to-date (YTD) nationwide reached 565,208. On a year-over-year (YoY) basis, this is a decline of 5.7% over the July 2024 level of 599,308. For multifamily, the total number of permits issued nationwide reached 286,836. This is 2.6% higher compared to the July 2024 level of 279,618.

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US Builder Confidence Steady (at Low Levels) but Future Sales Expectations Hit Six-Month High

By Robert Dietz
NAHB Eye on Housing
September 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Builder sentiment levels remained unchanged in September but lower mortgage rates and expectations that the Federal Reserve will soon cut the federal funds rate led to higher future sale expectations. Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes was 32 in September, unchanged from the August reading. While builder sentiment has hovered at a relatively low reading between 32 and 34 since May, builders expressed optimism that a more favorable interest rate climate could bring hesitant buyers off the sidelines in the final quarter of 2025. NAHB expects the Fed to cut the federal funds rate at their meeting this week, which will help lower interest rates for builder and developer loans. Moreover, the 30-year fixed rate mortgage average is down 23 basis points over the past four weeks to 6.35%, per Freddie Mac. This is the lowest level since mid-October of last year and a positive sign for future housing demand.

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US builders are ‘cautious but hopeful’ as interest rate cut looms

The Tree Frog Forestry News
September 17, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway, Finance & Economics

US homebuilder confidence remains low as permits slide, but expectation of an interest rate cut boosts future sales expectations. In other Business news: the future of Domtar’s Glenwood, Arkansas sawmill is in question; and UPM extends its pulp mill closures in Finland. Meanwhile: AF&PA joins trade-group opposition to proposed US rail merger; and the American Journal of Transportation opines on Trump’s tariff war impact on trade, trucking and home ownership.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: Canada’s growing Wildland Urban Interface increases fire danger; what to know about the newly created US Wildland Fire Service; and wildfires continue to rage in Oregon’s Lane County; as fire bans are lifted for northern Vancouver Island. Meanwhile: Plilomath, Oregon adapts with mass timber; the Canadian Wood Council features Toronto’s Limberlost Place; and the BC Institute of Technology advances careers in the lumber and sawmill sector.

Finally, a US Lumber Coalition commentary claims most of lumber duties paid by Canadian mills will go into the US Treasury.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Limberlost Place: A New Era for Mass Timber

Canadian Wood Council
September 17, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

We’re proud to share the story of Limberlost Place, the world’s first 10-storey exposed mass timber academic tower — a landmark project at George Brown College that redefines what’s possible in sustainable construction. Limberlost Place demonstrates how mass timber reduces carbon, enhances well-being, and delivers design innovation at scale. It’s also a story of collaboration — bringing together architects, engineers, contractors, and educators to set a new standard for the built environment. Watch the full video case study now to see how Canada is building a more sustainable future.

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How do you build a house that could get grandma through the apocalypse?

By Steph Kwetásel’wet Wood
The Narwhal
September 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Since wildfires tore through his Yunesit’in community in 2017, Russell Myers Ross has been pursuing a dream: building a fire-resistant house that will survive everything climate change can throw at it. …The design includes a white, highly reflective metal roof that deflects heat and is fire-resistant, gravel lining the house and sprinklers facing the walls — using easily accessible technologies for a resilient home that makes sense for the dry, hot interior of B.C. …Ross and professor John Bass from the University of British Columbia’s school of architecture and landscape architecture released videos of the prototype on Monday that include a three-dimensional walk-through of the design and community members speaking to the importance of getting this house built.

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Programs to help advance your career in the lumber and sawmill sector

By Linh Tran
British Columbia Institute of Technology
September 17, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BCIT School of Construction and the Environment offers two Associate Certificate programs designed to support workforce development in the North American lumber and sawmill sector: Industrial Wood Processing (IWP) & and Business of Sawmilling (BOS). The programs were developed in collaboration with industry experts to equip professionals with the skills and knowledge needed to advance their careers while meeting the evolving demands of the sector. Both programs are delivered online, on a part-time basis, and over 12 months. The programs are designed to allow working professionals to gain practical, job-relevant skills through formal education while balancing their workplace responsibilities.

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Oregon timber town finds new life as sawmills adapt to sustainable building

By Ezra Kaplan
KPTV
September 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

PHILOMATH Ore. – When the Interfor sawmill shut down in Philomath, Oregon last year, it felt like more than a loss of jobs. It felt like a rupture in the town’s identity. The mill was the only one within city limits, and its closure eliminated more than 100 positions in a town of just under 6,000. …But six months later: Timberlab, a Portland-based company stepped in to buy the site, offering a second life not just for the property but for the town’s economic future. Timberlab specializes in mass timber. Timberlab’s work can be seen in parts of the new Portland International Airport and dozens of buildings across the region. “Back in the day, you used large trees for columns and beams,” said Timberlab Chief Executive Officer Chris Evans. “Now, with advances in technology, you can use small pieces of wood laminated together.”

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Forestry

Building to the forest’s edge fuels fire danger

By Cloe Logan Rory White
National Observer
September 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

… Fires in Canada’s Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) are becoming more common as cities continue to sprawl, increasing the risk to structures. Regions across the country are grappling with the competing pressures of building housing and expanding industry, while climate change… continues to create hot, dry conditions that make wildfires more intense and frequent. A paper released in 2024 states that the “unprecedented expansion of global urbanization” has led to huge expansion of the WUI globally — by nearly 36 per cent since 2000, with 85 per cent of that growth occurring between 2010 and 2020. The study findings highlight the urgency of implementing tailored fire management strategies in WUI areas. However, there are no up-to-date figures on WUI in Canada, though Natural Resources Canada notes, “the risk of WUI fire is expected to increase both in regions of Canada with a long history of wildfires and in those with no such history.” 

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Public feedback key as Revelstoke corp eyes 253 ha of logging near Downie Arm

By Evert Lindquist
Revelstoke Review
September 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

This summer, the Revelstoke Community Forest Corporation (RCFC) published a Forest Operations Map for public review of a series of cutblock and logging road proposals… The map remained available Aug. 15 until Saturday, Sept. 13, with RCFC pursuing three years of cutting and road-building 70 kilometres north of Revelstoke near Downie Arm. …But community members having the chance to submit comments and concerns directly to a licensee … was part of a “relatively new process” implemented last year by the B.C. government, Wildsight conservation specialist Eddie Petryshen explained. Effective since April 2024, the province has amended its Forest and Range Practices Act to require that licensees provide a Forest Operations Map for public comment as part of the review and approval process. Petryshen said B.C.’s forestry management has spun in cycles, rather than evolve, and “who knows what cycle we’re in now.” But looking ahead, he’s hopeful RCFC will take the feedback it gathered to heart.

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Fire ban to lift Wednesday for northern part of Vancouver Island

By Marc Kitteringham
Victoria News
September 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Coastal Fire Centre is lifting the campfire ban for the Campbell River, North Island and Sunshine Coast forest districts as of Sept. 17 at noon. Due to declining fire danger ratings on the northern part of Vancouver Island, the Province has chosen to re-allow campfires and other small fires in the area. Campfires will remain prohibited for the rest of the Coastal Fire Centre, with the exception of the Haida Gwaii Forest District. The activities that will be allowed also include the use of sky lanterns, wood-fired hot tubs, pizza ovens and other devices that are not vented through a flue or are incorporated into buildings. Category 2 and 3 open fires remain prohibited throughout the Coastal Fire Centre, which includes backyard burning, industrial burning, fireworks, burn barrels and burn cages. These restrictions will remain in place until 12:00 (noon), PDT, on Friday October 31, 2025, or until the order is rescinded.

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Trump administration announces creation of U.S. Wildland Fire Service: What to know

By Zach Urness
Statesman Journal
September 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

@USForestService

The Trump administration announced the creation of the U.S. Wildland Fire Service in an effort officials said aims to “modernize wildfire management nationwide.” The move, announced Sept. 15 by the Department of Interior, would unify all wildland fire programs under one banner by January 2026. The two agencies said they’d work in “lockstep” to create the new service to “eliminate fragmentation, and deliver a forward-looking, mission-ready system that prioritizes common sense, efficiency, and results,” a news release said. A fire chief would be appointed to lead the U.S. Wildland Fire Service, who would “possess appropriate wildland fire management experience” and a full consolidation of firefighting operations would come together by Jan. 12, 2026, under Secretary’s Order 3443. …The new service would focus on five different priorities including inefficiencies in aviation systems, interagency coordination and response, federal partnerships, wildfire research, and integrating pre- and post-fire activities into a complete wildfire strategy.

 

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State scientists are planting thousands of Oregon Ash trees in invasive beetle territory, hoping to find rare natural resistance

By Karen Richards
Oregon Public Broadcasting
September 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Just outside Cottage Grove at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Dorena Research Center, scientists are playing a numbers game: They’re growing thousands of Oregon Ash, sourced from up and down the West Coast, hoping to find the rare tree with genetic resistance to the Emerald Ash Borer. About one in 1,000 trees, or five of the 5,300 seedlings here, may be able to survive the beetle infestation, according to Dorena Center geneticist Richard Sniezko. “We’ve labeled each seedling, so when they’re planted out, there will be a tag on it. So we’ll know which parent tree it came off of.” It’s a gamble, but it could put the West Coast a step ahead of many other states, where people are now finding a few so-called “lingering,” living ash trees, and propagating them. …Oregon Ash grows from British Columbia to southern California.

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Forest Fires

Oregon wildfire updates: Emigrant, Foley Ridge fires continue to burn

By Haleigh Kochanski
The Register-Guard
September 15, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

Two wildfires continue to burn in steep, heavily forested terrain in rural parts of Lane County. The Register-Guard is tracking weather updates, warnings, evacuations and fires. Here’s what you need to know. Foley Ridge Fire: Expect long delays on OR 242: The lightning-caused Foley Ridge Fire is burning just south of OR-242 east of McKenzie Bridge in Lane County. It was first reported on Sept. 6 and has burned at least 414 acres at 0% containment. …Emigrant Fire: On the morning of Sept. 15, the Emigrant Fire, burning in a rural area 20 miles southeast of Oakridge, was reported at 32,347 acres and 34% containment.

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