Region Archives: Canada

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Canada’s forest management has to adapt to climate change

By Tony Kryzanowski
The Logging & Sawmilling Journal
April 25, 2024
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada

Tony Kryzanowski

An early fire season is upon us in many parts of Canada already, and in some regions, fire fighter shortages abound. This alone demonstrates that forest management in Canada must change. Otherwise, expect huge swaths of forests to burn every summer from now on, as well as escalating costs for fighting fires, until the Canadian forest industry becomes a mere shadow of what it once was—or could be. But there is another way. It’s time to change our paradigm and view ourselves as gardeners rather than exploiters of the forest. Year round logging that includes a significant amount of variable retention as well as commercial and pre-commercial thinning to maintain a sustainable timber supply is not only necessary, it is inevitable as Canada transitions from natural forests to natural managed forests or plantations.

Continuing to spend vast amounts of money fighting forest fires is an insanely expensive, band-aid method to conserve Canada’s forests over the long term. Where government investment needs to happen now is in re-purposing a significant portion of money budgeted for fighting forest fires to forest resilience activities. …It is unfair to expect companies to adopt these expensive practices because of the length of their forest management agreements. It makes no sense to invest in these practices if there is no guarantee that the company will eventually reap the benefits down the road. So first and foremost, governments must consider longer forest tenure and management agreements of maybe a century or longer, carefully worded so that companies cannot escape liability for poor or negligent forest management practices. …Change or die. That may sound alarmist but the consequences of climate change are upon us. Intensive forest management or ‘gardening’ is our only hope.

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Business & Politics

Interfor Announces Lumber Production Curtailments Across All Regions of North America

Interfor Corporation
April 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

BURNABY, BC — Interfor announced plans to reduce its lumber production by approximately 175 million board feet between May and September of 2024, representing just under 10% of its normal operating stance. The temporary curtailments will impact all of Interfor’s operating regions, including the US South, through a combination of reduced operating hours, prolonged holiday breaks, reconfigured shifting schedules and extended maintenance shut-downs. The curtailments are in response to persistently weak market conditions. “Benchmark lumber prices have continued to weaken since the beginning of the year, from already unsustainably low levels, as available supply has outstripped product demand,” said Ian Fillinger, Interfor’s CEO. “This action… follows Interfor’s February 15, 2024 announcement to indefinitely curtail its sawmill operations in Philomath, Oregon. The Philomath sawmill had an annual production capacity of 220 million board feet and ceased operations and shipments at the end of March 2024.

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RYAM to Suspend Temiscaming High Purity Cellulose Plant Operations in Quebec

Rayonier Advanced Materials Inc. (RYAM)
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

JACKSONVILLE, Florida and TEMISCAMING, Quebec — Rayonier Advanced Materials (RYAM) annouced that, effective July 2, 2024, it will suspend operations at its Temiscaming High Purity Cellulose (HPC) plant for an indefinite period… given current market conditions and high capital and fixed costs associated with the HPC plant. …The Temiscaming HPC facility has an annual production capacity of approximately 150,000 metric tons, with roughly 30% historically dedicated to specialty cellulose materials. The announcement will result in approximately 275 layoffs. “Persistent market weakness, uncertain availability of affordable wood fiber, and high capital and fixed costs have posed significant challenges for the Temiscaming HPC plant,” said CEO De Lyle Bloomquist. …This decision does not affect RYAM’s paperboard and high-yield pulp plants located adjacent to the Temiscaming HPC plant. These two plants, which are part of an ongoing sales process announced last October, remain competitive and will continue to operate at full capacity.

In related coverage: Uncertainty for the future of RYAM’s Témiscaming plant

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Cash crunch puts Surrey’s Teal-Jones Group into court protection from creditors

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Teal-Jones Group, the multi-generational B.C. forestry firm with three mills and some 400 employees in the Lower Mainland, filed for court protection from its creditors Wednesday as dwindling revenues left it without the cash to pay its bills. B.C. Supreme Court Justice Gordon Weatherill granted Teal-Jones a stay of insolvency proceedings, giving the company a chance to raise the cash it needs, including through the sale of assets such as land holdings on Haida Gwaii. Historically, Teal-Jones had been able to run profitable operations and reinvest those profits in the business but faced a growing cash crunch through 2023, company vice-president Gerrie Kotze said in an affidavit to Teal Jones’s court petition. …Teal-Jones was also the logging company at the centre of old growth logging protests at Fairy Creek on Vancouver Island, which the company said cost it $40 million. …Its U.S. holdings now consist of operations in Sumas, Wash., Virginia, Oklahoma, Mississippi and its 57% stake in the new mill under construction in Louisiana, which Teal-Jones has put up for sale as part of its court proceedings.

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Paper Excellence launches third year of Engineer-in-Training Program

Paper Excellence Canada
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Paper Excellence has announced the launch of the third year of its Engineer-in-Training (EIT) Program. The company shares in a press statement that it is proud of its commitment to nurturing new talent in the pulp and paper industry. Over the past three years, Paper Excellence has welcomed 20 young EITs into its operations, with 15 choosing to remain and thrive within the organization. Recruitment begins by partnering with post-secondary schools such as, British Columbia Institute of Technology, University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University, University of Toronto, University of Saskatchewan to attract the best new graduates. Those selected will begin an 18-month journey, rotating through different operations to gain experience by working with various teams at different mills and living in different communities. During this process, mentors will provide invaluable coaching, training, and support to ensure mentees receive ongoing feedback and guidance.

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Merritt’s mayor dangles airport lands to keep Edison Motors in city

By Paul James
Radio NL – Kamloops News
April 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chace Barber and Eric Little

The mayor of Merritt says new overtures are being offered to Edison Motors to try to keep the electric-hybrid logging truck manufacturer from leaving the city — including the possibility of a home on municipal-owned land. Mike Goetz says while he’s been acting as a facilitator between Edison and local land owners to find the space needed to fit the company’s needs, he says he’s also offered up 4 acres of refurbished land at the Merritt Airport which the company could use as a start-up option. “We are redoing our airport. We have … about 4 acres that we could lease to them to get them started,” Goetz told Radio NL. “Edison co-founder Eric Little said that would work. They’d be able to get about 25 trucks out a year.” Goetz suggests this would likely be a bridging solution to help keep Edison in Merritt while other opportunities potentially arise.

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Canfor Southern Pine Grows in Arkansas with Acquisition from Resolute

Canfor Corporation
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – Canfor Corporation is announcing that it has entered into a purchase agreement with Resolute El Dorado Inc., an affiliate of Domtar Corporation, to acquire its El Dorado lumber manufacturing facility in Union County, Arkansas. The US$73 million acquisition, including working capital, will create synergies and vertical integration opportunities given its complementary geographic fit with Canfor’s existing operations in the region. The facility, which is close to key end-markets, produces dimensional lumber and specialty wood products. Its integration will capitalize on the Company’s regional manufacturing footprint to optimize product portfolio and maximize value. Leveraging Canfor’s experience and expertise, and with an anticipated further $50 million in planned upgrades, production capacity is expected to increase to 175 million board feet per year.

 

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Forestry company Teal Jones files for creditor protection in B.C. court

By Jane Skrypnek
Black Press Media
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The largest privately owned logging company in B.C. has filed for creditor protection, saying it no longer has the cash flow to maintain operations and pay off its debts. Surrey based Teal-Jones Group with operations throughout the province and the United States, filed its request in B.C. Supreme Court on April 24. The company has been in business since 1946 and said it’s been largely profitable over the decades. However, Teal Jones said in its filing, a combination of falling lumber prices and rising inflationary pressures since the beginning of 2023 have landed it in a place where it can no longer meet obligations to creditors on time. …As part of its application, Teal Jones has chosen international business advisory company PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc (PWC) to act as a monitor over the process. It will be PWC’s responsibility to report to the court on Teal Jones’ operations and help with developing a plan of arrangement.

 

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Outlook for B.C.’s forestry sector in 2024 not so rosy

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
April 27, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Russ Taylor & Paul Quinn

Canadian lumber output was down more than 20% for the better part of 2023, compared to 2022, and even lower in B.C. — a reflection of higher interest rates and muted global economic growth, according to a Global Consulting Alliance forest sector outlook. And the first half of 2024 may not be much better for the forest sector. Forest sector analyst Russ Taylor noted that lumber prices have recently fallen below US$400 per thousand board feet — the break-even point for many producers in B.C., as well as the U.S. “We’re sort of treading water,” Taylor said. “The U.S. south is losing money,” he added. “They’re below break-even. They’re in worse shape right now than B.C. mills are.” Lumber demand has not come back yet in 2024 the way he expected, Taylor said. …He expects more curtailments this year. “That will put supply and demand back into balance,” he said. “I think the second half of the year should be better.”

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Construction industry battles labour shortage, lack of diversity

By Matt Hutcheson
City News Kitchener
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — With demand growing for new homes and infrastructure projects, construction companies are finding it increasingly difficult to find enough workers. The number of construction workers has been slowly declining for several years, made worse by the pandemic. …The Canadian Home Builders Association has estimated nearly one-quarter of residential construction workers plan to retire in the next decade. And experts say there aren’t enough people in line to fill those jobs. “This is a crisis, as it relates to talent,” Jeff MacIntyre, President of Grand River Construction Association said. MacIntyre said his organization is actively looking at ways to diversify its workforce and make it more attractive to different demographics, particularly women. MacIntyre believes there also needs to be a shift in attitudes towards skilled trades.

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‘We will leave no stone unturned’: forestry minister on the Terrace Bay mill

By Austin Campbell
Northern Ontario Business
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — The provincial government is providing some clarity in the face of questions surrounding the idling of Terrace Bay’s mill. Ontario’s minister of natural resources and forestry, Graydon Smith provided updates. It was earlier this month Premier Doug Ford… seemingly implying the plan was to close the mill for good. Smith, however, indicated that they have not given up on the possibility of reopening the mill. …Smith indicated that discussions between Aditya Birla Group and potential buyers are “ongoing” and, although the province’s involvement in those discussions is limited, he and his ministry are doing everything they can.” …Mayor Paul Malashewski alluded to the fact that time is of the essence, with sawmills in White River and Hornepayne — which used to send their wood chips to Terrace Bay —experiencing a backlog. “Sooner or later, the sawmills are going to have to go down, too,” Malashewski said.

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Finance & Economics

Canada’s GDP ticks up 0.2% in February

Statistics Canada
April 30, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased 0.2% in February, following a 0.5% gain in January. Services-producing industries (+0.2%) led the growth for a second month in a row, fuelled by gains in transportation and warehousing. The goods-producing industries aggregate was essentially unchanged as the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector expanded while the utilities and manufacturing sectors contracted in February. Overall, 12 of 20 sectors increased in the month. …The manufacturing sector declined 0.4% in February, driven by declines in transportation equipment manufacturing and chemical products manufacturing. Transportation equipment manufacturing contracted 2.9% as six of seven industries comprising the subsector were down.

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Canfor Corporation reports Q1, 2024 net loss of $65 million

Canfor Corporation
May 1, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, B.C. – Canfor Corporation reported its first quarter of 2024 results. Highlights include: Q1 2024 operating loss of $86 million; shareholder net loss of $65 million; Sustained pressure on global lumber markets and pricing, especially for Southern Yellow Pine; Solid earnings from Europe; US South results directly impacted by weak SYP lumber pricing; Western Canadian results remained challenging despite uplift in Western Spruce/Pine/Fir lumber pricing; Modest uptick in NBSK pulp unit sales realizations, 7% increase in pulp production quarter-over-quarter.  …CEO Don Kayne, said, “Although global lumber markets remained under pressure in the first quarter, especially Southern Yellow Pine, our global lumber footprint helped mitigate some of these market-related pressures, as our European operations delivered positive results and our Western Canadian operations benefited from an uplift in SPF pricing. ….In British Columbia, the operating conditions remain challenging, as we continue to face persistent constraints associated with a lack of economically viable fibre.”

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Canfor Pulp reports Q1, 2024 net loss of $2 million

Canfor Pulp Products Inc.
May 1, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, B.C. – Canfor Pulp Products reported its first quarter of 2024 results. Highlights include: Q1 2024 operating loss of $16 million; net loss of $2 million; Modest uptick in NBSK pulp unit sales realizations, despite relatively subdued global pulp demand and flat
producer inventory levels; and 7% increase in pulp production quarter-over-quarter reflecting solid operational performance and reduced unplanned downtime. CPPI’s CEO Kevin Edgson, said, “This was an improved quarter for Canfor Pulp, as we benefited from generally steady global softwood pulp market conditions and solid pulp production at both NBSK mills. While we continue to navigate the external challenges facing our business in relation to the availability of economically viable fibre, both in the short and longer term, we greatly appreciate our employees’ continued focus on enhancing our operational performance and efficiency.”

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Canadian Lumber Production Continues to Fall 2023

By Mark Smith, FEA
The Logging and Sawmill Journal
April 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

In 2022, we saw total Canadian softwood lumber shipments drop by almost 2.2 billion board feet, a 9.4 percent decrease over 2021 total Canadian shipments. This trend has continued through 2023 with total Canadian lumber shipments dropping from 20.9 billion board feet in 2022 to 19.8 billion board feet in 2023, a further loss of 1.1 billion board feet. This means a combined loss of lumber supply for the two years of 2022 and 2023 equal to 3.3 billion board feet. Last year in March 2023, FEA had noted that softwood lumber usage was expected to decline still further in 2023, with residential construction, residential improvement, and industrial use all taking a hit as the economy slows. However, the fundamentals underlying softwood lumber’s main end-use markets remain strong, and markets are expected to recover in 2024.

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Goodfellow reports Q1, 2024 new loss of $108,000

Goodfellow Inc.
April 30, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

DELSON, Quebec — Goodfellow announced today its financial results for the first quarter ended February 29, 2024. The Company reported a net loss of $108 thousand to a net loss of $211 thousand a year ago. Consolidated sales for the three months ended February 29, 2024 were $105.3 million compared to $105.9 million last year. Though under pressure from lingering inflation and cautious consumer sentiment, Goodfellow achieved a comparable overall financial performance. …With uncertain economic conditions ahead, the Company will continue to protect margins and seize opportunities for growth with new and existing customers.

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Forestry

Night firefighting a Canadian first for B.C. helicopter company

By Kevin Forsyth
Parksville Qualicum Beach News
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Parksville-area helicopter company is off to fight forest fires at night in Alberta, which will be a Canadian first. The crew from Ascent Helicopters arrived in Alberta on Sunday to do some initial training with personnel there, according to Trent Lemke, owner of Ascent Helicopters. Ascent has experience doing search and rescue and air ambulance operations at night, but this will be the first night-time firefighting contract, he added. “Alberta will be the first province to do so,” Lemke said. “No one has fought fire at night in Canada, in the U.S. they do it quite a bit.” Ascent’s purpose-built tanks on the bottom of their helicopters, combined with night vision use will bolster forest fire fighting efforts by allowing crews to “action” a blaze throughout the night, Lemke said. “If it’s a high-priority fire you can stay with it, where traditionally we’re pulling off just before dark,” he said.

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How mapping tree genomes can help plant forests resilient to climate change

By Stephanie Cram
CBC News
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Barb Thomas

A research team at the University of Alberta is looking into why some trees in Alberta are more resilient when faced with drought, disease and the risk of wildfires by sequencing tree genomes. …The genome Alberta resilient forests project, led by U of A professor Barb Thomas are using the genetic makeup of trees to map out the genome for pine and spruce trees. “We measure populations and make assessments and measurements … to produce progeny that could then be used for reforestation,” Thomas said. …The Genome Alberta Resilient Forests project is already getting a lot of attention from the province and timber industry. “We are working to understand the impacts of the changing climate on the forest and are supporting research into the genetics of trees that appear to be better adapted to the future climate,” wrote Richard Briand, chief forester for West Fraser’s Alberta branch. 

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Red ink and red flags for BC forestry

Resource Works
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two special videos are coming from the Indigenous Resource Network (IRN) — “a 2-part documentary focused on the unique stories of Indigenous forestry workers.” Part One launches May 9 on IRN’s YouTube channel. …The BC government has committed to a policy of encouraging and enabling greater First Nations participation and more Indigenous partnerships in the industry. …We hope the IRN video tells us more. Because, sadly, the policy has become yet one more factor in the uncertainties affecting the sector. And at this point, the outlook of BC’s forest sector is a full of red ink and red flags. …BC has been implementing bans on, or deferrals of, much old-growth logging, with consequent impact on the industry. And the province has been pushing for more “value-added forestry” — more “high-value product lines…”  But that will be, at best, a painfully slow advancement. And if there is less wood cut, does that not mean more challenge for value-added forestry? 

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Wildfire Coexistence in BC: Solutions Symposium

UBC Faculty of Forestry
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

UBC Forestry and the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence are excited to announce the Wildfire Coexistence in BC: Solutions Symposium, in partnership with the Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science at UBC Okanagan! This Symposium will bring together British Columbia’s leading wildfire experts and practitioners to highlight the urgent need to develop a transformative vision and implementation strategy for wildfires before it is too late. We will shed light on the profound impacts of wildfires and tremendous costs to the BC population, emphasizing that the 2017‒2023 fire seasons were not an anomaly but a new and escalating reality fueled by climate change. Join us June 3-5, 2024 at UBC Okanagan in Kelowna and learn about the stark realities of the societal, health, cultural, environmental, and economic costs of wildfires across British Columbia and the actions needed now.

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Environment minister defends clear-cutting of Bragg Creek-area recreation mecca

By Bill Kaufmann
The Calgary Herald
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Impending clear-cutting of treasured hiking and biking areas near Bragg Creek will be done responsibly, Alberta’s minister of environment and protected areas said Tuesday. But conservationists and outdoor enthusiasts say they have their doubts, and insist logging two large blocks in the West Bragg Creek and Moose Mountain areas is also economically dubious. Forestry company West Fraser said it’s going ahead in the fall of 2026 with logging what could be nearly 900 hectares of forest in a recreation zone less than an hour from Calgary. They have provincial government sanction to do so under a 20-year forestry management plan, but only under sustainable conditions, said Environment and Protected Areas Minister Rebecca Schulz. “My department is concerned with ensuring we are protecting the environment, that environment standards are upheld, that we’re looking at impacts to water, wildlife, air and biodiversity — so those are the kinds of things we look at before projects move forward,” she said. 

Related coverage in CBC: West Fraser to host open house on contentious logging plans

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Low West Kootenay snowpack threatens drinking water drawn from creeks

By Bill Metcalfe
Terrace Standard
May 31, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The reservoir at Mountain Station, which feeds all the water pipes in Nelson, is not really a reservoir. …“Our reservoir is actually the snowpack, along with Five Mile Creek and the other creeks,” Chris Johnson, the city’s manager of community planning, climate and infrastructure says. The West Kootenay snowpack is only at 72 per cent of normal this year. But a low snowpack is not necessarily a threat to Nelson’s water supply, says Johnson. “We could still have a spring and summer such that enough precipitation falls that ensures the creeks continue to run strongly throughout the dry season.” Should Nelson be worried about its drinking water supply over the long term, in light of the lower snowpacks caused by climate change? It depends on the interactions of a multitude of factors including snow, rain, temperature, the aspect (north or south facing) of the watershed and how much forest cover it has.

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Locals question BC Timber Sales’ future cutblock plans – Coast Reporter

By Connie Jordison
Sunshine Coast Reporter
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Sunshine Coast Streamkeepers Society, the Roberts Creek Official Community Plan Committee and Elphinstone Logging Focus and individuals have contacted BC Timber Sales (BCTS) with concerns about the agency’s plans within the Sunshine Coast business area over the next three years. Those who have not yet submitted comments have until May 4 to do so. A public BCTS notice provides links to mapping and details on proposed cutblocks, tree retention areas and road sections. Just over 1,200 hectares are slated to be included in 64 cutblocks within BCTS’s map area 1214 (which includes areas on the upper and lower Sunshine Coast) from May 2024 to May 2027. …Streamkeepers pointed out, “logging the Roberts Creek headwaters will change the natural hydrology of the ecosystem of both the forest and the numerous upper main tributaries.”

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Joe Smith Creek cutblock auction decision delayed into May

By Connie Jordison
Coast Reporter
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The decision on whether to list, further delay or forego the auction of logging rights for TA0521 (Joe Smith Creek cutblock) “will be coming in the next few weeks” according to an April 24 email from the Ministry of Forests to Coast Reporter. Documents posted on BC Timber Sales’s (BCTS) website had the auction listed to occur by March 31. In the email the Ministry stated “initial timelines for cutblock decisions were estimates only. The Ministry will take as long as is necessary to ensure the proper reviews are conducted before decisions are released.”  On April 25, Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) ended an over three-week protest presence in opposition to logging the site at road access to the cutblock, just off the B & K logging road in the Roberts Creek area. Spokesperson Hans Penner told Coast Reporter the group would stand down “for now,” while it would be “keeping a close eye on BCTS’s sales list.

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Abbotsford’s Conair Aerial Firefighting: On the front lines of the wildfire battle in B.C.

By Ben Lypka
Today in BC – Black Press
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Summer is just around the corner and for much of British Columbia that now means dealing with the looming threat of wildfires. But for one Abbotsford company it is their time to shine. Conair Aerial Firefighting, located on the Abbotsford International Airport grounds, is a global leader in the battle against wildfires and continues to grow. The company boasts the third-largest fleet of any company in Canada, with 70 aircraft taking on challenging situations all across the planet. They have been used for years in places like B.C., Alaska, Alberta, Australia, France and Washington State. Conair also recently announced a new deal to work with the Saskatchewan provincial government to battle fires in that area. Conair invited the media and government officials to tour their facility on April 26 and learn more about both the production and training aspects of the company.

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Skattebo Education Forest Hosts Forestry Intelligence Projects

By Selkirk College
Education News Canada
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Skattebo Education Forest is located on the east shore of the Kootenay River between Nelson and Castlegar, just south of the community of Glade. Classes from natural resource diploma programs visit Skattebo to participate in field trips where they collect forest, fisheries and ecosystem data and learn to interpret this information. Skattebo also provides Selkirk Innovates researchers with the perfect location to test new technology and techniques in projects that benefit local communities, industry, and the environment. Principal investigator Dr. Brendan Wilson leads this suite of forestry intelligence research. “We’re very excited about the work we’re doing in Skattebo,” says Wilson, “because it connects learning with real-world applied research.” Skattebo research projects are currently testing methods to identify individual trees in the forest, quantify common forest stand metrics, determine canopy heights, determine tree health status, identify cones for seedstock, assess understory fuels and more.

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New tool empowers citizens during environmental assessments

By Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy
Government of British Columbia
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) has launched a new tool to engage the public during environmental assessments, empowering people to have a more meaningful impact on the decision-making process for major projects proposed throughout the province. EPIC.engage is a new engagement platform designed to improve the overall experience for people providing feedback during the public comment periods of an environmental assessment. …“Public engagement is a critical part of our environmental assessment process and of transparency. It provides valuable information about proposed major projects in BC,” said George Heyman, Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy. “EPIC.engage makes it easier for the public to provide information that is both helpful and might otherwise be missed during the technical process of an environmental assessment.” Providing feedback is anonymous. The platform protects the identity of commentors while verifying that are not “bots” or people seeking to undermine a project or the assessment process.

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BC Community Forest Association April Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The April newsletter includes:

  • 2024 BCCFA Conference & AGM, June 11 – 13 in Mackenzie, BC: Conference sessions, accommodations, field trip, and carpooling.
  • Wildfire Resiliency and Training Summit review and report.
  • BC works with communities to boost wildfire prevention, preparedness
  • Updates from the Forest Investment and Reporting Branch
  • Commercial Thinning  – A Practical Guide for Woodlot Licensees in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia 
  • Fire is medicine –  Westbank First Nation’s Ntityix Resources – Home of the Westbank Community Forest 
  • Kootenay Community Forest Seeking a Mill Manager

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Climate change, not habitat loss, may be biggest threat to caribou herds: study

By Bob Weber
Canadian Press in CBC News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Climate change, not habitat loss, may be the biggest threat to the survival of threatened caribou herds, new research suggests. “We might need to do additional management actions if our goal is to conserve caribou,” said Melanie Dickie, lead author of the study. For years, biologists have pointed to sustained industry-caused damage to the old-growth forests preferred by caribou as the reason the species is now threatened. …But climate change has also been at work in the forests. Slowly warming temperatures have greatly expanded the range in which whitetail deer can thrive. …Using an extensive network of camera traps that captured tens of thousands of images of whitetail deer, the researchers concluded that the north-south temperature gradient made a much larger difference to deer density than the east-west differences in human disturbance. …If Dickie’s paper is correct, no amount of tree-planting and cutline remediation will be enough.

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B.C. court acknowledges First Nation’s land claim off Vancouver Island

By Lynda Mapes
The Seattle Times
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a historic victory for the Nuchatlaht First Nation, the Supreme Court of BC has recognized the aboriginal title to more than 4 square miles of land on Nootka Island, including a pristine salmon lake, salmon stream and forest that had been threatened by industrial logging off the west side of Vancouver Island. The ruling by Justice Elliott Myers recognized Nuchatlaht’s title to the remote coastal strip of land. With the ruling, the Nuchatlaht Nation of just 160 people has become the second-largest aboriginal titleholder in B.C. And the Nation is just getting started: Nuchatlaht is weighing going back to court on appeal for acknowledgment of a far larger claim. …Nuchatlaht’s victory marks the first time a B.C. trial court has recognized a First Nation’s aboriginal title of its ancestral territory.

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Central Okanagan students cutting new career paths in forestry

By Barry Gerding
The Kelowna Capital News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Central Okanagan Public Schools offers alternate learning options that extend beyond sitting on a chair behind a desk. One such different learning path is the school forestry program offered at Rutland Senior Secondary under the instructional leadership of teacher Marshall Corbett. Jayden Shkrabuik and Nova Kidder, both enrolled in the program, appeared before the Okanagan Board of Education on April 24 to illustrate how their participation in the program has forged new career paths they never previously envisioned. Both talked about the learning excitement that comes from being outdoors four days a week and the lessons in life they are exposed to while learning about trees. …Local forest companies like Gorman Bros. and Tolko have also been partners to the program, providing logs for students to develop their chainsaw operation and equipment maintenance skills on at the RSS wood compound, a familiar site to school visitors at the southeast corner of RSS.

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Green Party deputy leader released pending appeal of jail sentence for Fairy Creek protests

By Todd Coyne
CTV News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Angela Davidson

British Columbia’s highest court has ordered the Green Party of Canada’s deputy leader to be released from custody pending her appeal of a 60-day jail sentence (issued April 24) for her role in old-growth logging protests on Vancouver Island. Angela Davidson, also known as Rainbow Eyes, was convicted earlier this year of seven counts of criminal contempt for breaching a court injunction blocking protesters from disrupting logging activities in the Fairy Creek watershed. …Davidson filed an appeal of her sentence two days later, and was ordered released on bail Monday pending the appeal hearing, according to the B.C. Appeal Court and the B.C. Prosecution Service. A spokesperson for the court said the Crown did not oppose granting Davidson leave for appeal, nor did it oppose granting her release from custody pending the appeal hearing. Davidson said her efforts to “braid the laws” of the Crown and Indigenous communities will continue.

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Every small seedling could become old growth

Letter by Tim Young, Sooke, BC
Victoria Times Colonist
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

I am not against saving old-growth trees — but I am against the ridiculous statements that keep getting thrown out there. Every tree planted is on its way to be an old-growth forest. The existing old-growth forests don’t last forever, as some would like you to believe. Some trees last a long time and others not so much. The end game is not years, but hundreds of years. Take large areas of new forests and plan to make them old-growth forests. …Compensate the owners and get on with it. All you keep hearing is how the old growth will never come back. How the biodiversity will be destroyed and never come back. Well, think about it. Fires have, since the dawn of time, destroyed the forests and the biodiversity. They came back. At one time, there was 1,200 metres of ice covering all B.C. …That probably lasted thousands of years. It all came back, didn’t it?

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$14 million added to budget for wildfire preparedness

By Erika Rolling
Everything GP
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Todd Loewen

Two additional air tankers and two-night vision-equipped helicopters are being added to the province’s list of equipment to be prepared for wildfire season 2024. These pieces of equipment are contracted out. Alberta now has three-night vision helicopters on hand. As wildfire behaviour is usually subdued at nighttime with lower temperatures and higher humidity, Minister of Forestry and Parks Todd Loewen says the two additional helicopters will help with overnight operations. An additional $14 million will be going to the Community Fireguard Program administered by the Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta. The program is in place for communities so they can clear areas to make fire breaks by cutting off fuel sources that could potentially drive towards infrastructure, properties, or other values at risk. There is now $19 million in place for the Community Fireguard Program.

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Federal government concerned about further delays in release of Quebec government’s caribou strategy

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

GATINEAU, QC – The Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, has issued the following statement in response to the measures announced today by the Government of Quebec for the Boreal and Mountain Caribou in the Gaspé Peninsula. “I would like to thank the Government of Quebec for presenting their plans before the May 1 deadline. However, several critical elements are missing, particularly the Quebec government’s August 2022 commitment to reduce the rate of disturbance in caribou habitat so that at least 65 percent of the territory for each caribou population is undisturbed. In addition, today’s announcement does not mention several caribou populations. The Government of Quebec must publish a strategy for all Boreal Caribou populations in Quebec, including immediate interim measures.”

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Review says Nova Scotia wildfire response was ‘impressive,’ but finds staffing, training gaps

By Jean Laroche
CBC News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

An independent review of the fires that destroyed more than 200 homes and burned 25,000 hectares of Nova Scotia forest last year is generally positive about how the province deployed resources, but noted many areas for improvement. The Nova Scotia government paid Calian, a consulting and research firm, $45,500 to do an “after-action report” on the wildfires that started on the South Shore at Barrington Lake, and in the Halifax-area community of Tantallon. The more than 200 email responses to their survey included agencies, first responders, municipal and provincial governments, including Department of Natural Resources (DNR) staff. The review highlighted a number of strengths in the province’s response to the wildfires… [and] it found gaps in a number of areas, including training and department response plans. …The review also found staffing levels were inadequate, and some of those involved in responding to the fires lacked training for the jobs they were called on to do.

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Ontario short forest firefighters as over a dozen wildfires are reported, union says

By Katherine DeClerq
CTV News Toronto
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

More than a dozen wildfires have been reported in Ontario and the union representing forest firefighters says their crews are still short about 25 per cent of their staff. As of April 29, there have been 14 wildfires recorded in Ontario, compared to two last year. …Noah Freedman, vice president of Ontario Public Service Employees Union Local 703 and a provincial forest fire crew leader, said the province is still missing about 25 per cent of its firefighting staff. “Ontario is supposed to have 800 firefighters, which represents 200 fire crews,” Freedman told CTV News Toronto. “The more crews we have, the more incidents people can respond to at one time. It’s not uncommon in a bad fire season to have … 12 fires in one area when you wake up in the morning.” …A spokesperson for the Minister of Natural Resources says that 630 fire crew positions have been filled and said it was “well within” their recruitment range.

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Ottawa fire fighters get specialized urban wildfire training

By Natalia Goodwin
CBC News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Twenty-five members of Ottawa’s wildland firefighting crews have completed a special training program that certifies them to fight forest fires in an urban setting. The crews were already doing that work, but this weekend’s training has brought them up to the standard set by Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. It’s part of a provincial mandate to have all firefighters properly certified for the fires they’re tasked with fighting. The course focused on a scenario that firefighters in Ottawa would more regularly deal with: the “urban interface,” a situation where combustible forests and grasslands are close to urban developments. Tackling an urban interface fire is typically a less intensive undertaking than fighting an out-of-control forest fire, which can require crews to camp remotely for weeks at a time, said Ottawa Fire Services rural sector chief Tom Miller.

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Health & Safety

May 2024 public hearing on proposed changes to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation

WorksafeBC
April 30, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

WorkSafeBC will be holding a virtual public hearing on proposed amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. The virtual hearing will cover proposed changes to the following parts of the OHS Regulation: Part 6, Substance Specific Requirements — Combustible Dusts. The virtual public hearing will be streamed live on May 14, 2024, in two sessions. The first will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the second from 3 to 5 p.m. We welcome your feedback on the proposed amendments. All feedback received will be presented to WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors for their consideration. You can provide feedback online or by email, or register to speak at the hearing by phone.

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Forest firefighters secure presumptive Workplace Safety and Insurance Board coverage for high cancer risk

By Ontario Public Service Employees Union
Cision Newswire
April 29, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – Ontario’s forest firefighters will soon have the same presumptive Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) coverage that urban firefighters do. Like urban firefighters, forest firefighters are at a higher risk of cancer, heart disease and heart injuries, and post-traumatic stress disorder. While certain diagnoses for urban firefighters are presumed to be work related, forest firefighters didn’t have automatic recognition for WSIB. …”The fight is not over and there is still work to do to. But for all those who have sacrificed their health and their lives, and those who continue to, we can at least celebrate the promise of change. Now it’s up to this government to implement this change immediately,” said OPSEU/SEFPO Local 703 Vice-President, Noah Freedman. Experienced forest firefighters are leaving Ontario’s wildland firefighting program for higher paying jobs elsewhere. The insultingly low wage the Ontario government offers doesn’t reflect the high-risk nature of this job. 

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