Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

Canfor Announces Permanent Closure of Polar Sawmill and Suspension of Planned Reinvestment in Houston, B.C.

By Canfor Corporation
Cision Newswire
May 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC – After thorough analysis of the persistent shortage of economically available timber and challenging operating conditions in northern BC, Canfor Corporation announced the permanent closure of its Polar sawmill in Bear Lake, BC and the suspension of its planned reinvestment in Houston, BC. This follows the announcement by our subsidiary company, Canfor Pulp, that one line of production will be indefinitely curtailed at the Northwood Pulp Mill. The Polar sawmill has been curtailed since January 2024. The permanent closure will impact approximately 180 employees. CEO Don Kayne said, “The ability to reliably access enough economic timber to run our manufacturing facilities is critical for our business. Unfortunately, while our province has a sufficient supply of timber available… the actual harvest level has declined dramatically in recent years. While this decline is partly the result of natural disturbances  it is also the result of the cumulative impact of policy changes and increased regulatory complexity.

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Timberlab Acquires American Laminators Accelerating Growth of Mass Timber Construction

By Timberlab Holdings Inc,
PR Newswire
May 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Chris Evans

PORTLAND, Oregon — Timberlab, a provider of mass timber systems, and Diversified Wood Resources, doing business as American Laminators, an Oregon-based glue-laminated timber manufacturer, announce that they have entered into an agreement for Timberlab to acquire the assets of American Laminators and will continue operating their two Oregon-based facilities in Drain and Swisshome beginning June 10, 2024. Timberlab President Christopher Evans said, “acquiring American Laminators is another leap forward to advancing our capabilities and services in the mass timber industry.” Since its founding in 1962, American Laminators has been one of the leading manufacturers of custom glulam in the United States. They produce the longest-spanning glulam in North America, utilizing a clear glue that adds to the high aesthetic value of their product.

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Weyerhaeuser Appoints Brian Chaney as Senior Vice President of Wood Products

By Weyerhaeuser Company
PR Newswire
May 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Brian Chaney

SEATTLE — Weyerhaeuser announced the appointment of Brian Chaney as senior vice president of Wood Products, effective June 3, 2024. Chaney currently serves as vice president of Engineered Wood Products and Innovation for the company, and he will take over for Keith O’Rear, who is retiring from his role on June 3 and will serve as a strategic advisor to the company through the end of 2024. “Brian has demonstrated exceptional leadership driving safety, strategy and operational excellence in his 33 years with the company,” said Devin W. Stockfish, president and chief executive officer. …”I also want to congratulate Keith on his retirement and thank him for his 36 years of outstanding leadership and service with Weyerhaeuser,” Stockfish said. …”We are grateful for all he has done to grow the business and build on our industry-leading operating performance.”

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Maine wood products companies get $1.6 million in federal grants

By Kelley Bouchard
The Press Herald
May 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Brian SouersThree Maine wood products companies will share $1.6 million in federal grants to support innovation and continued production in the state’s forest industries. The funding is from the Wood Innovations and Community Wood Grant Program of the U.S. Forest Service, which is investing $74 million in 171 projects nationwide, Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, said.  Treeline, a company based in Chester, will receive $1 million for its Penobscot River Treatment Facility to produce thermally modified wood products. Godfrey Forest Products will get $300,000 to help produce oriented strand board, at its mill in Jay. Tanbark in Saco will receive $300,000 to help expand its capabilities to replace plastic packaging with molded wood fiber. “These federal grants support rural economies while investing in forward-thinking, sustainable practices (and) help Maine loggers and forest product producers adapt to ever-changing industries, climate (impacts) and markets,” Pingree said.

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Teal Jones Group to reopen mills in Virginia, Oklahoma, and Mississippi on May 13

The Lesprom Network
May 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Teal Jones announced it will reopen all of its mills in Virginia, Oklahoma, and Mississippi on May 13, 2024. The decision follows the company’s restructuring under the Canadian Companies Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA), initiated on April 25, 2024, due to declining lumber prices and disputes over logging rights on Vancouver Island. Supported by $56 million from Wells Fargo, Teal-Jones Group is set to resume operations, ensuring job continuity across its locations. This restructuring does not impact its U.S. operations, specifically the Teal Jones Sawmill in Plain Dealing, Louisiana. Teal Jones-Plain Dealing, LLC, which manages the Plain Dealing Sawmill, remains independently funded and is not involved in the CCAA proceedings. Construction at the Plain Dealing Sawmill continues without disruption, with the facility anticipated to start production in summer 2024 and reach full capacity by fall. 

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Finance & Economics

US exports offshore bounced off historic lows in first quarter

RISI Fastmarkets
May 16, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

North American softwood lumber exports to offshore destinations posted mild gains in the first quarter, sustaining the momentum evident in the second half of 2023. Canadian exports overseas reached 376 million board feet through March, nearly matching the 379 mmbf shipped in the first quarter of 2023. …Canadian exports to China fell 17% to 154 mmbf after surging 22% in all of 2023. Exports to Japan climbed to 105 mmbf, up 26% from the year-ago pace. Western S-P-F exporters have captured a growing share of the Japanese J-grade market in 2024 from European suppliers. …Further, rising log costs in Europe prompted lumber exporters to raise prices in Japan, providing Canadian suppliers with a price advantage in that market. …Canadian exports to the US increased 8% in the first quarter to 3.06 bbf. Shipments to the U.S. fell 6.7% in 2022 and 2023. US exports to offshore destinations reached 113 mmbf in the first quarter, up 28% from the 88 mmbf shipped in the first three months of 2023.

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US Housing Starts vs Completions Looks Ominous for the Economy

By Mike Sherlock
Mish Talk
May 16, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Housing completions have surpassed housing starts. History suggests bad things follow. But what’s happening this time? …Year-to-date in 2024, U.S. multifamily completions are outpacing new starts at the widest levels since 1975. The gap will likely widen further. Completions are at multi-decade highs while starts continue to rapidly plunge due to several headwinds: high rates, flat-to-falling rents for lease-ups (depending on the market), and construction costs often coming in above replacement value. Simply put: It’s very difficult to start new unsubsidized apartment projects right now. Folks on this app often don’t realize that developers do not self-fund their own projects. …So while supply will continue to exceed demand in 2024, keeping downward pressure on rents, you can see how demand could exceed supply again by 2025, which would in turn put upward pressure on rents.

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Higher Mortgage Rates Hammer US Builder Confidence in May

By Robert Dietz
NAHB – Eye on Housing
May 15, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

With mortgage rates averaging above 7% for the past four weeks per data from Freddie Mac, builder sentiment posted its first decline since November 2023. Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes was 45 in May, down six points from April, according to the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). The market has slowed since mortgage rates increased and this has pushed many potential buyers back to the sidelines. A lack of progress on reducing inflation pushed long-term interest rates higher in the first quarter and this is acting as a drag on builder sentiment. …The May HMI survey also revealed that 25% of builders cut home prices to bolster sales in May, ending four months of consecutive declines in this metric. However, the average price reduction in May held steady at 6% for the 11th straight month. 

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US inflation eased slightly in April but housing costs continue to drive price increases

By Jing Fu
NAHB – Eye on Housing
May 15, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Both overall and core inflation eased slightly in April amid higher costs for gasoline and shelter. On a year-over-year (YOY) basis, the shelter index rose by 5.5% in April, following a 5.7% increase in March. Despite a slowdown in the YOY increase, shelter costs continue to put upward pressure on inflation, accounting for nearly 70% of the total increase in all items excluding food and energy. This ongoing elevated and uneven inflation is likely to keep the Federal Reserve on hold and delay rate cuts this year. …The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 0.3% in April on a seasonally adjusted (SA) basis, after an increase of 0.4% in March. It marks the largest monthly increase since June 2009.

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US Housing Starts, Permits Fall Short as Mortgage Rates Rise in April

By Vince Golle
Bloomberg Economics
May 16, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

New US home construction rose by less than forecast in April and permits for new activity dropped, suggesting the recent rise in mortgage rates is giving builders pause. Housing starts increased 5.7% to a 1.36 million annualized rate after downward revisions to prior months, according to government data released Thursday. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 1.42 million rate. Authorized permits for single-family home construction have now dropped for three straight months to the lowest level since August after trending higher toward the end of last year. That may constrain beginning home construction going forward. Building permits for all units, a proxy for future construction, fell 3% to a 1.44 million rate, the lowest since the end of 2022. That mostly reflected a large drop in authorizations for apartment complexes. …The number of completed single-family homes climbed to a 1.09 million annualized rate, the most since November 2022. 

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US Single-Family Permits Up in March 2024 (on a year-over-year basis)

by Danushka Nanayakkara-Skillington
NAHB – Eye on Housing
May 14, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Over the first three months of 2024, the total number of single-family permits issued year-to-date (YTD) nationwide reached 241,311. On a year-over-year (YoY) basis, this is an increase of 25.9% over the March 2023 level of 191,695. Year-to-date ending in March, single-family permits were up in all four regions. The range of permit increase spanned 38.0% in the West to 12.5% in the Northeast. …Between March 2024 YTD and March 2023 YTD, 47 states posted an increase in single-family permits. 

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Inputs to residential construction increased for the sixth consecutive month

By Jesse Wade
NAHB – Eye on Housing
May 14, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Inputs to residential construction, goods less food and energy, increased for the sixth consecutive month, according to the most recent producer price index (PPI) report published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. …The non-seasonally adjusted index increased 0.14% in April after increasing a revised 0.50% in March and 0.47% in February. The index is up 2.77% from April 2023. …The seasonally adjusted PPI for softwood lumber increased 6.20% in April. This was the largest month-over-month increase since January of 2022 when the index shot up 21.56% over the month. From April of 2023, the index was 4.31% lower. …The non-seasonally adjusted PPI for gypsum building materials fell 0.74% in April. …The seasonally adjusted PPI for ready-mix concrete fell for the first time in four months, down 0.27% in April. …The non-seasonally adjusted PPI for steel mill products fell for the second straight month, down 2.67% for April after an 8.10% decline in March. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Fisher-Price introduces new Wood toy line

Toy World Magazine
May 17, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Fisher-Price is expanding its portfolio with a new wooden toy line, featuring a range of products for children aged from six months to five years, designed to inspire creativity and promote healthy development. Affordably priced for every family, the new toys are made with wood from FSC-certified sources and offer a wide range of play patterns, from colourful puzzles and blocks to role play, music-making and more. They are also built to last, allowing families to pass them down from generation to generation. Available exclusively at Walmart this May and later in the year in Europe and the Asia Pacific regions, the Fisher-Price Wood Line offers a contemporary take on long-lasting and accessible play, with toys designed to inspire creativity and promote healthy development. Fisher-Price Wood features playful designs and on-trend themes that are engaging and inspire creativity.

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Houston’s first mass-timber office building breaks ground

By Marissa Luck
The Houston Chronicle
May 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

HOUSTON, Texas — Construction on one of the first mass-timber office buildings in the Houston area launched Thursday in Cypress, offering a model for the real estate industry to rein in its greenhouse gas emissions. One Bridgeland Green, developed by The Woodlands-based Howard Hughes, will be built using engineered wood for structural components. The 49,000 square-foot, three-story building will open next year near the Grand Parkway in the Bridgeland master-planned community. Building any new structure generates greenhouse gases, but steel and concrete are particularly carbon intensive. Mass timber could reduce construction emissions by 14% to 31%, research suggests. …A handful of private developers have proposed mass-timber offices in Houston, but the Bridgeland project is the first to break ground. …“We see a significant reduction in embodied carbon throughout a project’s lifecycle compared to a steel or concrete building,” said Ryan Jones with Lake Flato, the design architect for the project.

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Forestry

Fire, carbon & healthy soils: Microbial communities thrive after prescribed fire

By Kalen Breland
The USDA Forest Service
May 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

FLORIDA — New research shows that even the smallest ecological communities – like the microbes in soil – thrive after prescribed fire. The bacterial and fungal communities in the soil are small but mighty, cycling nutrients and carbon through the ecosystem by contributing to decomposition and carbon sequestration. However, research has been scarce on how fire affects soils. SRS researcher Melanie Taylor [et al] took advantage of a long-term fire study site in Florida to explore how prescribed fires affect the tiny world beneath the forest. …The study resulted in two major findings: over time, fire changes thickness of upper soil layers and increases the richness of microbial communities. The key to both findings appears to be how organic matter, and specifically carbon, moves through the soil. By moving carbon through the soil and preventing the buildup of organic matter on the forest floor, frequent prescribed fire increases the thickness and health of the topsoil. 

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Alaskan Communities Awarded Funding to Mitigate Wildfire Risk

Alaska Wildland Fire Information
May 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A second round of funding through the USDA Forest Service’s Community Wildfire Defense Grant (CWDG) Program will support communities across Alaska through grants for creating Community Wildfire Protection Plans, planning efforts, or implementation totaling $3,759,337. Communities received priority for this program if they are a low-income area, recently impacted by disaster, or in a wildfire hazard location. “To support additional wildland fire mitigation in at-risk communities, the State of Alaska opted in to the CDWG program to allow local applicants the maximum resources and assistance from the Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection,” said Norm McDonald, Deputy Director of Fire Protection. “The program aims to help communities effectively deal with wildfire risk and the division encourages eligible communities and organizations to take advantage of this funding opportunity and apply throughout the five-year program.”  

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Ground versus crown fire: How the new Fort McMurray blaze differs from The Beast

By Kelly Malone
The Canadian Press in The Chronicle Journal
May 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, US West

A fierce wildfire burning outside Fort McMurray, Altberta has brought back memories of a vicious blaze, nicknamed The Beast, that tore through the oilsands hub in 2016. …The most significant difference between the two wildfires is what parts of trees are burning. Jody Butz, the fire chief in charge of the Rural Municipality of Wood Buffalo, describes the 2016 fire as a big raging crown fire, while the current blaze is on the ground in the path of the former blaze. …John Gradek, at McGill University, says crown fires burn in the tops of trees. Flames jump from tree to tree along the peaks at a high rate of speed. When wildfires are on the ground, they move much more slowly, but have a lot more to burn, he says. “It is a much more intense (fire), and there is a lot of material on the ground,” Gradek says.

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Bureau of Land Management shares draft resource management plan for Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument

By Justin Higginbottom
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Federal courts recently upheld the expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument on the border of Oregon and California. Now, the Bureau of Land Management is working on a plan for that monument’s future, inviting the public to learn more about the management options. The monument located on the border of Oregon and California was first in 2000 and expanded in 2017. Timber companies challenged that expansion, arguing the president didn’t have the power to designate a monument on Oregon and California railroad lands originally set aside for logging. In March, a federal appeals court upheld the expansion. …The BLM’s preferred plan, labeled “moderate active management,” emphasizes flexibility, according to the agency. That option would reduce the amount of land managed for recreation from 9,859 acres to 431 acres. It would also decrease the area where wildfire fuels reduction is prioritized from 29,600 acres to 10,944 acres, with a focus on land .25 miles from at-risk communities.

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US Department of Agriculture Invests $250M to Reduce Wildfire Risk to Communities

By the Forest Service
The US Department of Agriculture
May 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

YAKIMA, Washington – Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Xochitl Torres Small announced $250 million to help at-risk communities protect their homes, businesses and infrastructure from catastrophic wildfire, made worse by the climate crisis, as part of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda. The Community Wildfire Defense Grant program will fund 158 projects to help communities in 31 States, two Territories and 11 Tribes develop community wildfire protection plans and remove overgrown vegetation that can fuel fires that threaten lives, livelihoods, and resources. …Now in its second year, the program helps communities in the wildland-urban interface maintain resilient landscapes, create fire-adapted communities, and ensure safe, effective wildfire response — all goals of the unifying National Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy and aligned with the objectives of the National Climate Resilience Framework.

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USDA Invests in Wood Products to Support Local Jobs and Healthy Forests

By the Forest Service
The US Department of Agriculture
May 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

YAKIMA, Washington – Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Xochitl Torres Small announced that the Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service is investing nearly $74 million to spark innovation, create new markets for wood products and renewable wood energy from sustainably sourced wood, and increase the capacity of wood processing facilities as part of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda. …these investments fund 171 project proposals across 41 States and American Samoa, and directly support forest health and the wood products economy. …The Forest Service is awarding grants to entities across the public, private, and non-profit sectors through its Wood Innovations Grant, Community Wood Grant, and Wood Products Infrastructure Assistance Grant Programs. …Funded proposals include converting heating systems in schools to sustainable biomass boilers, installing cutting-edge equipment in sawmills and processing facilities to increase efficiency, supporting innovative housing using mass timber, and more.

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To replant Oregon’s forests after major wildfires, state foresters have a need for seed

By Joe Raineri
KGW8
May 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

NEWBERG, Ore. — Following the destructive wildfires in 2020, state officials started looking to plant new trees to replace those that burned. Now the Oregon Department of Forestry has turned to an expert to make sure those new trees have the best chance of survival. Workers at the Oregon Department of Forestry spend a lot of their time keeping Oregon green, and one place they spend much of that time is at J.E. Schroeder Orchard in Saint Paul. ODF manages the property, but you could say Kevin Barnes is a key figure in making sure our forests continue to grow. He’s a grafting specialist and makes sure the trees in the orchard will be able to produce seeds for replanting in forests both in Oregon and across the Pacific Northwest.

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Oregon’s wildfire strategy: Building resilient forests and protecting communities

By Allison Gutleber
KATU News
May 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Oregon — The Oregon Department of Forestry says it is not sending crews to help with fires burning in western Canada. Dozens of fires in British Columbia and Alberta are labeled “out of control.” …While we haven’t seen any major fires in the Pacific Northwest, that could change in an instant, officials say. The Oregon Department of Forestry wants to make sure we’re ready when it happens. They are building a vision for Oregon’s forests. Right now, the Oregon Board of Forestry and the Department of Forestry are working together to put together a strategy to protect the state’s forests and the people who rely on them. …The plan includes funding wildfire resources, expanding the use of prescribed burns, and teaching more people about wildfire safety and prevention. The plan could be adopted in June, before heading to Governor Kotek’s desk.

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Wolf Fire operations wrap up following 10,000 acres of forest treatment

Arizona Daily Sun
May 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ARIZONA — According to a release from the Coconino National Forest, Wolf Fire operations have resulted in the treatment of roughly 10,000 acres of land following a late April lightning strike on the Coconino National Forest’s Mogollon Rim Ranger District. Fire managers spent roughly one week conducting firing operations to reduce dead vegetation and hazardous fuels, restore critical nearby watersheds, improve wildlife habitat and lessen the future risk of catastrophic wildfire in the Clints Well area. Firing operations wrapped up in advance of predicted rains for Tuesday and Wednesday. The Northern Arizona Type 3 Incident Management Team, which has been managing the Wolf Fire since April 6, plans to transition management of the fire back to the Coconino National Forest on Wednesday.

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Conservation groups, U.S. Forest Service settle on details of logging project near Townsend

By Darrell Ehrlick
Montana Right Now
May 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A large logging project ended in an unusual way for many lawsuits involving logging, endangered species and federal agencies: It settled without years of litigation. Late last year, two conservation groups, Native Ecosystems Council and the Alliance for the Wild Rockies filed suit to halt a large logging project near Townsend, known as the “Middleman Project,” that they said hurt elk, grizzly bear and Canada lynx, the latter two of which are classified by the federal government as endangered species. …The project was originally slated as a 20-year project in the Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest and the Big Belt Mountain Range. …As part of the agreement, the Forest Service can continue with the “associated activities” in the Crouching Trout Timber sale. The service also agrees to limit prescribed burning to the “inventoried wilderness areas” of no more than 25% of any area.

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Gov. Tina Kotek abandons nominations to Oregon forestry board after pushback

By Dirk VanderHart
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Tina Kotek

Gov. Tina Kotek abruptly pulled back this week on a pair of nominations to the board that oversees Oregon forest policy, after blowback from environmental groups over one of her picks. Kotek had planned to tap two men for the state Board of Forestry who have often been on opposite sides of debates over how much of Oregon’s forests should be open to logging. One was Bob Van Dyk, a conservationist who formerly spent a dozen years with the Portland-based Wild Salmon Center. The other: Heath Curtiss, vice president of government affairs for Hampton Lumber. The dual appointment would have left the balance unchanged on a seven-member board that is closely scrutinized for where its volunteer members stand on forest issues. …The reason appears tied to a letter eight environmental groups sent to Kotek’s office on Tuesday, railing against the selection of Curtiss for the board.

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Drought and dead trees are increasing Minnesota’s wildfire risk. A firefighter shortage will make it worse.

Kirsten Swanson
KSTP Eyewitness News
May 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

WLY, Minnesota – Dry, tall grass crunches underneath the boots of more than a dozen students, who are dressed in firefighting gear. The Wildland Fire Control and Management class at Minnesota North College’s Vermilion campus is setting fire to a five-acre field outside of Ely. It’s the second prescribed burn the class has performed this spring. …While dry conditions and dead, diseased trees are putting some of the state’s most treasured lands at risk, officials say a nationwide shortage of wildland firefighters could mean fewer resources dedicated to Minnesota to put them out. …The Forest Service acknowledges it’s struggling to hire firefighters all over the country. In early April, the agency said it had only signed on 76% of its total goal of crews for the summer.

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Interagency approach proves successful for Kentucky wildfire prevention

By the Forest Service
US Department of Agriculture
May 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

KENTUCKY—After decades of challenging fire seasons, the Daniel Boone National Forest in eastern Kentucky is beginning to see a decline wildfire incidents. This can be attributed to the Daniel Boone National Forest Law Enforcement and Investigations team’s proactive, interagency approach to reducing human-caused wildfire. Over 98% of wildfires in Kentucky are human-caused and nearly 60% can be directly attributed to arson. …In 2016, the forest law enforcement team began conducting interagency fire investigation training with the Kentucky Division of Forestry and the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources resulting in a skilled law enforcement team. …Eight years later, Daniel Boone National Forest law enforcement officers serve as trusted resources for incident reports and are supported in their wildfire investigations in communities where they were previously opposed. As communities engage with law enforcement … human-caused wildfires continue to decline, are being successfully prosecuted in court and restitution funds are returning to impacted areas.  

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Aftermath of northern Michigan timber embezzlement case

By Alli Baxter
UpNorthLive
May 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

CRAWFORD COUNTY, Michigan — In March, the Michigan Attorney General’s Office said Norman Kasubowski ran two timber harvesting companies. Kasubowski was charged with embezzlement for intentionally underreporting harvests and lying to land owners to avoid paying them what their timber was worth. …It’s been almost a decade since Kasubowski came to Edith Nelson’s property. They had an agreement to do a select cut of the 160 acres. In 2017, Kasubowski started harvesting timber and told her some of the costs were more than he expected. So they agreed to a trade: he could harvest some cedar trees to cover the extra costs. Edith said he took the cedars and the other trees behind. When Kasubowski didn’t pay Edith what she was really owed or remove the trees, she and others took legal action. After an investigation by the Michigan Attorney General’s Office, Kasubowski took a plea deal for embezzlement.

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Vermont logging company fined for wetland and water quality impacts

Vermont Business Magazine
May 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The Agency of Natural Resources Departments of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and Forests, Parks, and Recreation (FPR) announced that Thomson Timber Harvesting and Trucking was fined $32,550 for violating the Vermont Wetland Rules and failing to follow Acceptable Management Practices (AMPs) for Maintaining Water Quality on Logging Jobs in Vermont. …AMPs for Maintaining Water Quality on Logging Jobs in Vermont are designed to protect water quality and ensure that loggers are in compliance. …Agency staff observed several discharges caused by the failure to properly install stream crossings, construct waterbars, smooth ruts, and seed and mulch exposed soils. Agency staff also observed alterations to wetland and vernal pool habitat and hydrology from excessive brush and rutting. Thompson Timber completed remediation of the sites in the summer of 2021 with the help of Agency oversight.

In related coverage: Logger Matt McAllister has seen nearly everything that can go wrong.

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AI assess forest damage after hurricanes

By Meredith Bauer, University of Florida
Farm Progress
May 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

With Hurricane Preparedness Week kicking off today, University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences researchers are preparing for hurricane season with state-of-the-art monitoring equipment that will help them determine how extensively forests are damaged during individual hurricanes. …Getting an accurate assessment for how much timber is damaged by hurricanes is essential for environmental management decisions, salvaging logging operations, tree farms’ insurance estimates and climate change studies, but so far, it’s been a vexing puzzle. …These data help them know which areas were most affected and need help immediately, as well as which would benefit from specialized action at a later time – such as where to do salvage logging operations. …Additional data are collected with ground-based lidar scanners attached to all-terrain vehicles and a backpack apparatus to make high-resolution 3D maps of the forest.

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With recent storms and heavy rain, loggers say working conditions have never been more difficult

By Nicole Ogrysko
Maine Public
May 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Loggers said their operating conditions have never been more difficult, with recent storms, heavy rain and mild conditions over the last 18 months. A recent survey found that 50 Maine harvesters and haulers lost at least $2.6 million in income from the Dec. 18 storm. And Dana Doran, director of Professional Logging Contractors of the Northeast, said most Maine loggers worked just four weeks this winter. “Most of them had to shut down by the last week of February for the winter, so it’s just been a rollercoaster of a ride for all of them, starting with that Dec. 18 storm, but really going back to the winter of 2022-2023, because we never had frozen ground then, either,” he said. Doran compared the last 18 months to mud season, where the ground was too soft and saturated, and loggers couldn’t access the land they needed to harvest. When snow did fall this winter, it melted quickly.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

US Forest Service Funds Bioenergy, Pellet And Biochar Projects

By Erin Voegele
Biomass Magazine
May 14, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

The USDA’s Forest Service on May 14 awarded nearly $74 million to 171 projects through two grant programs that aim to create new markets for wood products and renewable energy from wood, and increase the capacity of wood processing facilities. The awards, made through the Wood Innovations Grant, Community Wood Grant, and Wood Products Infrastructure Assistance Grant Programs, support projects to increase demand and create new and innovative uses for sustainably sourced wood. A sample of 21 Awards include:

  • $170,000 to support a biomass district heating project in Nenana, Alaska
  • $300,000 for hydrogen to methanol by Bluestone Renewables in Arizona
  •  $300,000 awarded to Lignetics to support packaging line upgrades in Arizona
  •  $296,000 awarded to G.C. Forest Products to a support pellet mill in California
  •  $187,500 awarded to Growpro Inc. for a biochar project in California

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La Nina is on its way back. An atmospheric scientist explains what to expect

By Pedro DiNezio
PBS NewsHour
May 12, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

One of the big contributors to the record-breaking global temperatures over the past year – El Nino – is nearly gone, and its opposite, La Nina, is on the way. Whether that’s a relief or not depends in part on where you live. Above-normal temperatures are still forecast across the U.S. in summer 2024. And if you live along the U.S. Atlantic or Gulf coasts, La Nina can contribute to the worst possible combination of climate conditions for fueling hurricanes. …This year, forecasters expect a fast transition to La Nina – likely by late summer. After a strong El Nino, like the world saw in late 2023 and early 2024, conditions tend to swing fairly quickly to La Nina. How long it will stick around is an open question. This cycle tends to swing from extreme to extreme every three to seven years on average, but while El Ninos tend to be short-lived, La Ninas can last two years or longer.

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Health & Safety

Canadian wildfire smoke is triggering outdoor air quality alerts across the midwestern U.S. it could pollute the indoors, too

By Kiley Price
Inside Climate News
May 14, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, United States

Throughout May, more than 140 wildfires have burned across Alberta and British Columbia. …The “dirty secret” of outdoor air pollution is that you are breathing most of it when you’re inside, according to Joseph Allen, the director of Harvard University’s Healthy Buildings Program, where he studies indoor air quality. …So even though there are less pollutants inside, people can still be exposed to harmful levels of smoke during a wildfire event, which has been associated with a slew of health risks, from cardiovascular issues to asthma flare-ups. In February, the Environmental Protection Agency announced that Elliott Gall, a mechanical and materials engineering professor at Portland State University, and his team’s prototype product, dubbed The Cocoon, won the second phase of the the Agency’s “Cleaner Indoor Air During Wildfires Challenge,” an initiative launched in 2021 to kickstart the advancement of inexpensive technologies to improve indoor air quality.

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Webinar: Combating Heat and Cold Stress for Forestry Workers

By US Dept of Labour
Agrisafe Network
May 14, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

Forestry workers may be subject to extreme heat and cold. Working outdoors makes people more likely to become dehydrated and experience heat-related illness or heat stress. High temperatures reduce work capacity and may lead to heat stress and dehydration. Although exposure to heat stress is preventable, thousands become sick from occupational heat exposure every year, and some cases are fatal. Similarly, cold weather can reduce dexterity, blood flow, muscle strength, and balance. Hypothermia, frostbite, trench foot, and chilblains are all illnesses and injuries caused by cold stress. However, forestry workers can avoid heat-related illness and cold stress with proper information and preventative action. This June 6 webinar presentation will explore both weather-related conditions and their impact on outdoor workers. After the training, participants will be able to define Heat Stress, Cold Stress, and their related conditions, identify vulnerable populations and critical warning signs for interventions, and share essential resources for Workplace Safety Practices.

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Researchers look into community health impact of wood pellet production in rural Mississippi

By Danny McArthur
MPB News
May 15, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

MISSISSIPPI — Burning wood pellets for fuel can help power energy and heating systems, and proponents of the practice say it’s cheaper than other fuel sources and low in moisture and ash content, meaning the wood pellets should burn cleanly. But researchers from Brown University in Rhode Island and Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi, are examining if these wood pellet plants are harming the health of residents in the surrounding communities. …The study found that Mendenhall had less air pollution and less noise pollution than Gloster did. Erica Walker, at the Brown University School of Public Health, said the early findings are limited, and the universities plan to study Gloster long term. …“The strength of this is that we are beginning to actually put real data to the question of whether or not wood pellet manufacturing is harmful to the communities who live nearby,” Walker said.

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Forest Fires

First major wildfires of Canada’s season hit northern U.S. air quality

By Rebecca Falconer
Axios
May 13, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, United States

Officials in western Canada warned of “volatile wildfire activity,” as dozens of blazes burn in dry conditions across the country, triggering evacuation orders in affected regions and air quality alerts in several U.S. states this week. By the numbers: Most of the 139 blazes burning in the first major wildfires since Canada’s record season that finally abated in October were in British Columbia (46) and Alberta (46) as of early Tuesday, per the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. The CIFFC listed 41 of these fires as “out of control” — among them the Parker Lake fire in northern British Columbia, which has burned over 20,000 acres since it began on Friday and which was on Tuesday nearing the town of Fort Nelson, where evacuation orders have already been issued. The fires were impacting six U.S. states’ air quality into Tuesday: the Dakotas, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

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Drivers diverted on Alaska Highway as Western Canada wildfire rages on

By Lex Yelverton and Casandra Manci
Alaska News Source
May 15, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West, United States

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – The Parker Lake fire in Canada is still raging on, highly visible, and causing a potential threat to public safety for those living there and passing through the area. The BC Wildfire Service believes the fire — near Fort Nelson — was human-caused, and is burning out of control. According to the BC Wildfire Service, the fire is 49.2 square miles in size and has caused two active evacuation orders, which has caused the diversion of vehicles on the Alaska Highway. A portion of the Alaska Highway is closed, as the wildfire is between Suicide Hill Pullout and Milepost 375, according to Drive British Columbia. …A bit of rain, increased humidity, and cooler temperatures are expected for the next few days, but most of British Columbia continues to remain dry, according to the BC Wildfire Service.

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Thousands of Canadians have been forced to evacuate from raging wildfires. Now harmful smoke is blowing into the US

By Paradise Afshar and Sara Smart
CNN
May 13, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West, United States

Thousands across Canada have been urged to evacuate as the smoke from blazing wildfires endangers air quality and visibility and begins to waft into the US. Some 3,200 residents in northeastern British Columbia were under an evacuation order Saturday afternoon as the Parker Lake fire raged on in the area, spanning more than 4,000 acres. Meanwhile, evacuation alerts are in place for parts of Alberta as the MWF-017 wildfire burns out of control near Fort McMurray in the northeastern area of the province, officials said. The fire had burned about 16,000 acres as of Sunday morning. Smoke from the infernos has caused Environment Canada to issue a special air quality statement that extends from British Columbia to Ontario. …Smoke from Canada has also begun to blow into the US, prompting an alert across Minnesota due to unhealthy air quality. The smoke is impacting cities including the Twin Cities and St. Cloud.

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Crews still battling wildfire near Isabella

By John Myers
The Duluth News Tribune
May 16, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US East

ISABELLA — An intentional fire set by Superior National Forest crews to reduce fuels for future forest fires has grown into a wildfire across 265 acres but was being slowed Thursday by light rain, cooler temperatures, higher humidity and firefighting crews. The fire started Wednesday as an intentional prescribed burn near Fish Fry Lake in Lake County, just north of Minnesota Highway 1  in the Superior National Forest. It grew out of control Wednesday afternoon in gusty winds. As of noon Thursday, the fire had burned 265 acres. The original fire was intended at about 60 acres. …The Fry fire was one of several planned and already conducted this spring across the forest to reduce areas that have a heavy buildup of dead and drying trees that would be ripe for a future wildfire, such as areas hit by wind storms or infested with the spruce budworm insect.

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