Daily News for August 28, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

US opens Roadless Rule comment period, ENGOs push back

The Tree Frog Forestry News
August 28, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

The Trump administration public comment period on rescinding the US Roadless Rule sparks ENGO opposition. In related news: a US House delegation visits Alaska; and a federal court allows White Mountain National Forest logging to proceed. Meanwhile: Drax faces UK probe into biomass sourcing; Sweden debates paying forest owners to store carbon; UBC Forestry expands its Combined Heat and Power Academy; UBC’s Melissa McHale earns a Wall Fellowship for climate resilience research; and Mississippi State University names its first endowed professor in innovative wood design.

In Business news: US railroads pursue mega-mergers while CPKC and BNSF reject consolidation; Arkansas’s Two Rivers Lumber gets a federal grant; South Carolina’s timber sector faces uncertainty; lumber futures approach bear market territory; and wood-framed homes market share rose in 2024. In Health & Safety news: Canadian wildfires erase years of air quality progress; mechanization reshapes logger health risks in the US Northeast; New Zealand releases new guidelines for forest safety; and the latest news from the BC Forest Safety Council.

Finally, 350 endangered Mountain Yellow-legged Frogs leap back into California’s wild. 

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

U.S. railroads go off the rails in race to compete with Canadian rivals

Seeking Alpha
August 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

To better compete with Canada’s transcontinental railroads, efficiencies within the trucking industry, and to capitalize on a more relaxed regulatory environment, the railroad industry is entering into a consolidation phase with the major operators all reportedly in play. On the heels of the 2023 merger between Canadian Pacific and Kansas City Southern which connected Canada, the US and Mexico with the first single-line railway, Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern are pursuing a merger that would create the first coast-to-coast railway system in the US. The tie-up between Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific raised the possibility of further consolidation in the industry with investors eyeing a merger between CSX and BNSF, or with CPKC. While mergers might satisfy shareholders and activist investors, industry insiders see the trend creating more inefficiencies. …Freight Rail Customer Alliance is opposed to further consolidation given that past mergers have resulted in higher transportation costs and unreliable service for customers.

In related coverage:

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West Fraser Timber perseveres despite challenging economic pressures

By Jordy Cunningham
The Clearwater Times
August 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

West Fraser Timber is continuing to succeed in this ever-changing world, despite a lower second quarter. …Sales were up slightly from Q1 — $1.532 billion, compared to $1.459 billion. However, earnings were nearly cut in half — $24 million compared to $42 million in the first quarter. “Demand for many of our building products slowed in the second quarter as spring building activity fell short of our expectations,” said Sean McLaren, West Fraser’s President and CEO. “This was more acute in our North America Engineered Wood Products segment, which experienced further easing of demand as the quarter progressed [with] softer U.S. new home construction.” …West Timber’s director of communications, Joyce Wagenaar, told Black Press Media that this year has been a challenge economically. “2025 has brought a number of changes, most notably sluggish demand for building products in Canada and the U.S. due to challenging economic conditions, leading to a slowdown in new home construction,” said Wagenaar.

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Trump administration advances plan to reverse federal rule that limits logging in national forests

By James Brooks
The Alaska Beacon
August 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

©USDAFlickr

The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Wednesday that it is moving ahead with plans to rescind a rule that has restricted logging on federal lands for more than two decades. U.S. Secretary Brooke Rollins said the agency intends to open public comments Friday on its proposal to end the so-called “Roadless Rule,” an act that will affect as much as 45 million acres of federal land as well as millions of Americans who live near it. Opening a public comment period is the first step in repealing the rule. According to Rollins’ statement, members of the public will have until Sept. 19 to offer their opinions on the repeal, a timeframe that opponents of the plan denounced as inadequate. Roads are a key prerequisite for large-scale logging and mining projects, and the rule — enacted in 2001 at the end of the Clinton administration — has limited the number of development projects on Forest Service land.

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Secretary Rollins Opens Next Step in the Roadless Rule Rescission

US Department of Agriculture
August 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON – US Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced the USDA has taken the next step in the rulemaking process for rescinding the 2001 Roadless Rule by opening a public comment period. …The USDA Forest Service is publishing a notice seeking public comment on its intention to develop an environmental impact statement for the proposed rescission of the rule. The notice details the reasons for rescinding the rule, the potential effects on people and resources, and how national forests and grasslands are managed. The USDA will publish the notice August 29, 2025. …While the rescission would apply to roadless areas in Alaska, state-specific rules for Colorado and Idaho would not be affected by the proposal. In total, the 2025 rescission would apply to nearly 45 million acres of the nearly 60 million acres of inventoried roadless areas within the National Forest System. …The public is invited to comment no later than Sept. 19, 2025. 

A collection of responses to the Roadless Rule announcement:

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Grant awarded to help Two Rivers Lumber build plant in East Alabama

WAKA Action 8 News
August 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ALEXANDER CITY, Alabama — A $180,000 grant has been awarded to a Two Rivers Lumber to build a plant near the Tallapoosa County-Coosa County line. Gov. Kay Ivey has announced the grant, from the Appalachian Regional Commission, which is a federal-state partnership program. The $115 million sawmill will be built on a 110-acre site at the Lake Martin Regional Industrial Park. It is expected to create 130 jobs. The grant will help Alexander City provide infrastructure needed for the sawmill. “This sawmill will have a tremendous economic impact for Coosa County, Tallapoosa County and much of east central Alabama,” Gov. Ivey said. “While the mill will employ 130 people, the ripple effect will benefit timberland owners, foresters and harvesters.” …Two Rivers Lumber was established in 2017 in Demopolis by the owners of McElroy Truck Lines and Sumter Timber, both based in west Alabama.

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South Carolina timber industry faces uncertainty amid mill closures

By Caitlin Richards
ABC 15 News
August 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The timber industry, a cornerstone of South Carolina’s economy, is grappling the closure of several key mills. The recent shutdowns of mills in Darlington and Estill have sent ripples through the local supply chain, affecting forest management and the livelihoods of many in the industry. …The timber industry in South Carolina is struggling with significant challenges after major mill closures, including the International Paper Mill in Georgetown, the WestRock Plant in Charleston, the International Paper in Savannah and the Containerboard Mill in Riceboro. Michael Campbell, president and CEO of the South Carolina Timber Producers Association, highlighted the broader economic impact. “It’s a widespread county thing because the loggers tend to haul up to 100 miles away from the mill, so within 100 miles of that mill everything’s impacted,” he said. Despite some new mill announcements, Campbell said they are insufficient to compensate for the lost wood volume.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber futures on the brink of bear market territory as tariff-driven rally fizzles out

By Sinchita Mitra
Seeking Alpha
August 28, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures have come under strain after the initial tariff-driven upswing has fizzled out and the cracks in the housing market are beginning to show… retreating from an early August high of ~$695 per thousand board feet to about $560, a decline of nearly 19.5%, making it just shy of the 20% mark that would push it into a technical bear market. Lumber futures saw a surge driven by tariffs and optimism over lower interest rates, which pushed prices to their highest levels in more than three years. However, the enthusiasm soon faded away, as recent housing data disappointed, and builders scaled back due to higher input costs, weaker demand and looming affordability challenges. Housing affordability remains stretched even with potential rate cuts, requiring better wage growth or increased supply for meaningful improvement, according to Rafe Jadrosich, Senior US Homebuilders and Building Products analyst.

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US Wood-Framed Home Share Increased in 2024

By Jing Fu
NAHB Eye on Housing
August 27, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Wood framing continues to dominate the US single-family home construction market, according to NAHB analysis of 2024 Census Bureau data. In 2024, wood framing accounted for 94% of all completed single-family homes, reinforcing its position as the leading construction method. Concrete-framed homes represented 5% of completions, while steel-framed homes remained relatively rare, comprising less than half a percent of the market. On a count basis, approximately 959,000 wood-framed homes were completed in 2024. This was a 3% increase compared to the 2023 total. This growth also marked a rebound in market share, with wood-framed market share rising from 93% in 2023 to 94% in 2024. Steel-framed homes, while still uncommon, experienced notable growth. About 4,000 steel-framed homes were completed in 2024, representing a 33% increase from the previous year. Meanwhile, concrete-framed homes saw a decline. Their market share decreased from 7% in 2023 to 5% in 2024. On a count basis, 55,000 concrete-framed homes were completed in 2024, a 15% decrease compared to the prior year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Discover Vancouver’s legacy and North Shore’s community spirit — built with wood!

Woodrise 2025
August 28, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

As part of Woodrise 2025, the Offsite Technical Tours presented by WoodWorks open the doors to two inspiring full-day experiences. In Vancouver, explore the lasting architectural impact of the 2010 Winter Olympics — from the iconic Richmond Oval to contemporary landmarks like the VanDusen Botanical Garden Visitor Centre and Fast+Epp’s award-winning office. In North Vancouver, see how community-driven design and mass timber innovation come together in spaces like the Tsleil-Waututh Administration and Health Centre, Maplewood Fire and Rescue, and Lonsdale1. These exclusive tours showcase how wood is shaping sustainable, resilient, and culturally meaningful architecture across the region — and they’re selling out fast.

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Mississippi State University architecture professor to lead cross-college endowed program

By Meg Henderson
Mississippi State University
August 27, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

Jacob Gines

STARKVILLE, Mississippi —Mississippi State Associate Professor Jacob Gines is the inaugural Mississippi Lumber Manufacturers Association Endowed Professor in Innovative Wood Construction and Design. The Mississippi Lumber Manufacturers Association established the endowed position jointly in MSU’s College of Architecture, Art and Design and College of Forest Resources in 2024. Gines has taught architecture courses and advanced design studios at MSU since 2012. During his tenure, he has collaborated with MSU’s Department of Sustainable Bioproducts and the Mississippi Forestry Association on sustainable design using emerging and innovative forest products. Last year, he earned his Ph.D. in sustainable bioproducts, specializing in mass timber. …“Although we have a strong timber industry, we currently don’t have CLT manufacturing in our state. Increasing proximity and availability to mass timber materials would create exciting opportunities for our state’s architects, contractors and developers,” Gines said. “Another hurdle we must address is the unfamiliarity within the architecture and construction industries.

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Forestry

Melissa McHale Receives 2025 Wall Fellowships Award

By The Faculty of Forestry
The University of British Columbia
August 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Melissa McHale

UBC Forestry congratulates Dr. Melissa McHale on receiving one of two prestigious Wall Fellowships, UBC’s highest-value internal research awards. The fellowships will fund innovative research to help B.C. communities adapt to climate change and address rising housing demands. The Okanagan Valley is feeling the effects of climate change more than ever with hotter summers, more frequent wildfires and growing pressure on water supplies. On top of this, rapid growth and urban development are adding new challenges for local communities. Melissa’s research, entitled “Rising Heat, Roaring Flames, and Waning Waters: Building a Climate-Resilient Research Hub for British Columbia” is tackling these issues head-on in partnership with the City of Kelowna, Indigenous communities and local organizations. The project is exploring how cities can: Use trees and vegetation to cool neighbourhoods while saving water; Design greener spaces that also reduce wildfire risk; and Build healthier, more inclusive communities through nature-based solutions.

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Hundreds of Mountain Yellow-Legged Frogs leap back into the wild

By Alex Feltes
Birch Aquarium
August 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

More than 350 Mountain Yellow-legged Frogs have been reintroduced into the wild in Southern California’s San Bernardino Mountains, marking one of the largest releases to date and a significant step in efforts to save this endangered species. The release also represents a milestone for Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego — the aquarium’s first-ever species reintroduction and a historic moment in its growing conservation work. Birch Aquarium, in collaboration with San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, UCLA, Big Bear Alpine Zoo and others, released the frogs into a wildlife preserve managed by The Wildlands Conservancy. This effort is part of a long-running recovery program …“Thanks to these efforts, Mountain Yellow-legged Frogs are hopping around Bluff Lake for the first time since they were last recorded here in 1951,” said Tim Krantz, Conservation Director for The Wildlands Conservancy.

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U.S. House delegation visits Alaska this week, with focus on mining, timber and drilling

By James Brooks
The Alaska Beacon
August 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Ten members of the US House of Representatives’ Committee on Natural Resources are making an unusual visit to Alaska this week during a break from business on Capitol Hill. The 45-person committee deals with a variety of issues pertaining to public lands in the United States, and the visit is giving eight Republicans and two Democrats a chance to put their literal hands on the topics they cover. …Among the group was the committee’s chairman, Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Arkansas, as well as the home-state Republican Rep. Nick Begich. Also attending were Reps. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming; Tom Tiffany, R-Wisconsin; Pete Stauber, R-Minnesota; Rob Wittman, R-Virginia; Val Hoyle, D-Oregon; Paul Gosar, R-Arizona; and Sarah Elfreth, D-Maryland. …Several of the Republican lawmakers said they believe there is room to increase logging in the Tongass in order to meet the demand for lumber to build housing, particularly locally.

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Ruling allows logging plans for White Mountain National Forest to go forward

The Concord Monitor
August 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

©USDAFlickr

A federal judge ruled that commercial logging in two North Country sites in the White Mountain National Forest can go forward, raising questions about a similar lawsuit against logging plans in the Sandwich Range. U.S. District Court Judge Joseph LaPlante rejected many of the arguments against the U.S. Forest Service in a summary judgment handed down Aug. 20. The lawsuit was filed by Standing Trees, a Vermont-based group that advocates for forests on public lands, on behalf of New Hampshire individuals and businesses who would be affected by the logging operation. “It’s really a ruling on the process: Did the National Forest Service follow the appropriate process … with public hearings and other procedures?” said Jack Savage, president of the Society for the Protection of NH Forests, one of several environmental groups that supported the logging plans. …The lawsuit was filed by Vermont Law and Graduate School’s Environmental Advocacy Clinic on behalf of Standing Trees. 

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Forest soils accumulate microplastics through atmospheric deposition

By Collin J. Weber & Moritz Bigalke
Nature
August 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The occurrence and fate of microplastics in forest ecosystems is a recognized knowledge gap. In this paper, we used an aligned extraction method to quantify microplastics (>20 µm) in organic and mineral forest soil horizons and throughfall deposition. Calculation of forest soil microplastic stocks and throughfall fluxes allowed an estimation of throughfall contribution to microplastic accumulation in forest soils back to 1950. We identified a short-term microplastic enrichment in decomposed litter horizons followed by an accumulation in lower mineral soil caused by litter turnover processes. Similar microplastic features in soil and throughfall deposition indicate that microplastics entering forest soils primarily originate from atmospheric deposition and litter fall, while other sources have a minor impact. We conclude that forests are good indicators for atmospheric microplastic pollution and that high microplastic concentrations in forest soils indicate a high diffuse input of microplastics into these ecosystems.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Turning Slash into Solutions: UBC Forestry’s Combined Heat and Power Academy Builds Bioenergy Skills Across Canada

By The Faculty of Forestry
The University of British Columbia
August 27, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Williams Lake, B.C. – The University of British Columbia Faculty of Forestry’s Combined Heat and Power (CHP) Academy, based at the Alex Fraser Research Forest, has successfully wrapped up its June 2025 field training, bringing together participants from Ontario, the Northwest Territories, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia for an intensive, hands-on learning experience. Over five days, participants developed the technical skills and strategic knowledge needed to implement biomass energy projects, especially in remote Indigenous communities, while deepening their understanding of forest management, wildfire prevention, and community resilience. Through training on the CHP system, participants learned to operate and maintain biomass energy equipment, tracing the complete pathway from forest to fuel to community heat and power. …Future CHP Academy sessions are scheduled for September, October, and December 2025, and January 2026. 

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Drax under investigation by watchdog over biomass sourcing

The Gazette Herald
August 28, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Energy company Drax is under investigation by the UK’s financial watchdog over the firm’s sourcing of wood for biomass pellets in the wake of whistleblower claims. The London-listed group said the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) probe covers more than two years, from January 2022 to March 2024, and will also look at compliance of Drax’s annual reports from 2021, 2022 and 2023 with rules over listing, disclosure and transparency. Drax said it will “co-operate with the FCA as part of their investigation”. Shares in the FTSE 250 firm fell 8% in morning trading on Thursday. It follows accusations by Drax’s former head of public affairs and policy, Rowaa Ahmar, in March that the company had misled over its sourcing of wood for biomass pellets, which were made as part of her claim for unfair dismissal at an employment tribunal. Drax denied her claims. The firm and Ms Ahmar reached a settlement with Drax just over a week after the case opened.

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Climate Dispute In Sweden Over Paying Forest Owners To Store Carbon

By Violet George
Carbon Herald
August 27, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

STOCKHOLM — A political fight has erupted in Sweden over whether forest owners should be paid to delay harvesting trees as part of the country’s contribution to the EU’s ambitious carbon removal targets. The EU’s Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) regulation requires the bloc to remove 310 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent by 2030. With Sweden holding the EU’s largest forest area, the country is expected to play a central role in meeting that target. In 2022, the government commissioned a parliamentary committee to explore how to incentivize carbon storage. Its proposal: legally binding contracts offering landowners 400 SEK (~$42) per ton of CO2 if they delay felling their trees for 5 to 20 years beyond the minimum harvest age. …The plan has triggered fierce opposition. The Swedish Forest Industries Federation warns that 7,200 jobs are at risk, with smaller sawmills particularly vulnerable. …Supporters, however, argue that paying landowners reflects the forest’s true value.

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Health & Safety

Wildfires are reversing Canada’s progress on improving air quality

By Nicole Mortillaro
CBC News
August 28, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

It’s hard not to forget the 2023 Canadian wildfire season, when more than 16 million hectares of forest were lost, thousands were displaced and smoke suffocated cities across both Canada and the U.S. And it turns out Canada experienced its worst air pollution levels that year since 1998, according to a new report released today by the University of Chicago’s Air Quality Life Index (AQLI). At the same time, the report found that pollution levels didn’t change much for the rest of the world in 2023. If those levels continued for a person’s lifetime, the average Canadian would lose roughly two years of their life expectancy, according to the report. Efforts have been made around the world, including in Canada, to curb harmful emissions of fine particulate matter with a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometres, also known as PM 2.5. But wildfires are reversing those advances — with serious health consequences.

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BC Forest Safety News

BC Forest Safety Council
August 28, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

In this edition of Forest Safety News you’ll find these stories and more:

  • As we pass the halfway mark of 2025, BC’s forestry industry is facing a sobering reality: six workers have lost their lives on the job. These tragedies are a stark reminder that while we have strong safety systems in place, we must never become complacent.
  • A recent ruling from the Supreme Court of British Columbia has highlighted the serious risks posed by defective or expired bear bangers—pyrotechnic devices commonly used to deter wildlife in remote work environments.
  • Fall is coming bringing shorter days, wetter roads and the return of school speed zones, all of which contribute to increased hazards on the road. Whether you’re heading to a job site or driving through town, it’s a good time to adjust your habits behind the wheel.
  • BCFSC Safety Awards: Celebrating Safety Leadership – Nominations are open to anyone in forestry

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Renewed calls for alternative route as Vancouver Island road faces indefinite closure

CBC News
August 27, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

There are fresh calls for an alternative route to the west coast of Vancouver Island after it emerged the main route between Port Alberni and Bamfield, B.C., is closed indefinitely. …The only alternative is a logging road detour through Youbou in the Cowichan Valley. …Ditidaht First Nation Chief Councillor Judi Thomas said she hopes the province will go further and redesignate the forest service industrial road as a provincial road and fast-track investment. But the Ministry of Transportation and Transit said, “there is mixed ownership of the road(s) in this area, but all are private industrial roads, and the ministry has no plans to take over the ownership”. …The province says it’s working with Mosaic Forest Management, which is responsible for maintaining 15 kilometres of Bamfield Road, to beef up maintenance on the detour road . …D’Arcy Henderson, Mosaic’s chief operating officer, said it was working with stakeholders on maintaining that detour route.

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Mechanization raises health concerns among loggers in Northeast U.S. despite safety gains

By Madeleine Zenire, Pamela Milkovich, Patrick Donnelly et al
Science Direct in Lesprom Network
August 27, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

Mechanization has reduced fatal injuries for loggers in the northeastern United States but introduced new health risks linked to prolonged equipment use, according to interviews with 29 loggers across New York, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. Participants reported concerns over weight gain, back pain, and cardiovascular risks from extended sedentary work, as well as mental stress from financial burdens and limited access to affordable health insurance. The findings come from a study conducted by the Northeast Center for Occupational Health and Safety in Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing and West Virginia University Extension. Loggers described how mechanization improved protection by removing workers from direct chainsaw use and tree-felling risks. However, long hours seated in machines have increased exposure to whole-body vibration and reduced physical activity, contributing to obesity and hypertension. …Access to health insurance remains a barrier. Most loggers interviewed said they did not carry coverage, citing high costs and limited benefits.

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Forging New Path For Forestry Safety in New Zealand

The National Tribune
August 26, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

New guidance to simplify safety for forestry businesses and workers has been published by WorkSafe New Zealand. Forestry had the highest fatality rate of any sector in 2024, with 16.58 deaths per 100,000 workers. The fatality rate is 20 times higher than the average for all industries. The Approved Code of Practice (ACOP) for forestry and harvesting operations was spearheaded by WorkSafe, in collaboration with the forestry industry. The ACOP has now been launched by the Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety, Brooke van Velden. The guidance outlines the responsibilities and legal expectations for operators, and helps workers know what good looks like. An update to the good practice guide for small forestry operations has also been published, along with educational resources to aid understanding. New information is included on machine safety, planting and pruning (silviculture), managing work-related health, and manual tree felling.

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Forest Fires

Firefighting force on Long Lake wildfire grows to more than 170, plus 17 aircraft and 70 dozers

By Ian Fairclough
The Chronicle Herald
August 28, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

©Province of Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia — A replacement incident management team from Ontario is in Nova Scotia and taking over at the helm of the Long Lake wildfire for a bit. That will give the team from the Department of Natural Resources a break and time for rest before they return to dealing with the fire, which is now estimated at 8,234 hectares. The handover is a common occurrence in dealing with wildfires in Canada. …Crews are working the entire perimeter of the fire today while continuing to focus on the east side of Paradise Lake, where the closest threatened populated areas are Trout Lake and Albany on Highway 10. Those areas were evacuated Sunday after the fire more than doubled in size and high winds pushed it across West Dalhousie Road. …Evacuations have put more than 1,000 people out of their homes since the fire started.

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9 active wildfires burn in New Brunswick, 2 out of control

By Oliver Pearson
CBC News
August 27, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

Nine wildfires are burning in New Brunswick as of Wednesday evening, two of them out of control. Three fires are contained and four are being patrolled, according to the province. The total number is down from the 17 wildfires burning on Tuesday and the 39 burning 10 days ago. The Beaver Lake Stream fire in Northumberland County, near the Kennedy Lakes Protected Natural Area, is still out of control. The fire was 338 hectares on Tuesday and is now 456 hectares… The Rocky Brook fire is also out of control about 40 kilometres south of Dalhousie and is 175 hectares, down from 204 hectares in the previous report. …Natural Resources Minister John Herron said earlier this week that the wildfire situation is moving in the right direction, especially now that the province is no longer seeing temperatures “flirting with 40 C.” On Monday, he said the wildfire season could run to the end of September and possibly into October.

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