Daily News for July 22, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

Canada–US trade tensions dominate talks as tariff deadline looms

The Tree Frog Forestry News
July 22, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Canada–US trade tensions dominate talks as Prime Minister Carney briefs Canada’s premiers, and meets with four US senators. In other Business news: Domtar’s Skookumchuck mill faces effluent penalties; Maine’s Hammond Lumber buys its competitor; CWC applauds Nova Scotia’s wood use initiative; and Wales launches its first timber strategy. Meanwhile: a Fraser Institute report on Canada’s housing crisis; the US economy signals recession risk; WoodWorks BC and FSC Canada are hiring; and kind remembrances for longtime employees at Gorman Bros (Ray Van Ingen) and SFPA (Lionel Landry).

In Forestry/Climate news: Ottawa pledges $125 million to regrow Alberta forests; an interview with Kim Haakstad and Jess Ketchum on BC forestry; the US plan to shoot barred owls could be in jeopardy; red tree vole protections are sought in Oregon; a NY Times report says climate change makes fires worse; the US Forest Service faces a firefighter shortage; Trump’s new law is called bad for US emissions; and two stories on wildfire risk-reduction and US timber harvests. Meanwhile, wildfire conditions improve in northern BC; and a fire evacuation alert in Slave Lake, Alberta.

Finally, BC Wood will celebrate 22 years of excellence at the 2025 Global Buyers Mission.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

22nd Annual Global Buyers Mission on the Mountain

BC Wood Specialties Group
July 22, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC Wood is celebrating 22 years of hosting their popular Global Buyers Mission – and you’re invited. Join more than 700 delegates, September 5-7, 2025, in beautiful Whistler, British Columbia. This international event continues to be a great success for buyers and suppliers alike, with estimates last year of over $37 million in new business developed.  

Only a few booth spaces left: The GBM Trade Show brings together international pre-qualified buyers to meet with Canadian manufacturers of wood products including mass & heavy timber, engineered wood products; remanufactured items and components; prefabricated housing and structures; log/post & beam/timberframe homes and structures; millwork & finished building products; and specialty lumber including Western Red Cedar – all in a great networking environment. 

Specifier Workshops at the GBM: We will also invite North American buyers & specifiers to participate in our new Specifier Workshops program, held in conjunction with the GBM.
Evening Receptions

Social and Networking Events: In addition to the several daytime events that happen at the GBM, the GBM also hosts two evening networking receptions which are included in your registration. The first evening reception kicks off at the Roundhouse Lodge on the top of Whistler Mountain. 

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Business & Politics

We’re hiring! Join the Forest Stewardship Council Canada Team

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
July 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Just as we depend on forests, forests depend on all of us.  At the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), your work will create a better future for forests and people around the world. When you join our team, you can do your part to build a world where the true value of forests is recognized by all.

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Carney to brief premiers on US trade discussions as Trump deadline bears down

By Catherine Lévesque
The National Post
July 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Mark Carney

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney will be offering his update on trade talks with the White House when he sits down with the premiers Tuesday, while discussing their concerns as an Aug. 1 deadline for more tariffs rapidly approaches. Carney is joining the provincial and territorial premiers during their summer gathering in Muskoka, Ontario. …On Monday, Quebec Premier François Legault said he will tell Carney he wants protection in negotiations for supply management for the dairy, egg and poultry sectors. BC Premier David Eby has said he hoped Carney would kick off trade discussions by trying resolve the softwood lumber issue, which has been a trade irritant between Canada and the U.S. for decades. Carney recently said he thought it unlikely that there wouldn’t be at least some tariffs in any deal struck before Aug. 1, though most of Canada’s trade with the U.S. is protected by the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement.

Related coverage in:

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Investing in communities: Domtar puts vision into action

By Jennifer Johnson
Tissue Online
July 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Through the Domtar Connects program, employees lead impactful local initiatives—ranging from education and environmental projects to support for Indigenous communities—reflecting a long-term, values-driven commitment to social responsibility. …With nearly 14,000 employees across more than 60 locations, Domtar’s footprint is large, but its approach is local. The Domtar Connects community investment program responds directly to the unique needs of each operating community, ensuring that support is tailored, meaningful and led by employee input. Recent highlights include: 

  • Scholarships for trade students near our Windsor and Ashdown mills that help encourage the next generation of skilled labor. 
  • Urban tree planting projects in Montreal that give employees an opportunity to work alongside local youth and educators
  • Emergency response equipment donations in rural towns that help improve safety resources for first responders
  • Support for Indigenous cultural programs that contribute to the preservation of language, history and community connections

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Remembering Ray Van Ingen

By Nick Arkle, Gorman Bros. Lumber Ltd
LinkedIn
July 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Ray Van Ingen

On July 15, we said goodbye to one of the most loyal and beloved members of the Gorman Group family. Ray Van Ingen joined our Gorman Bros. West Kelowna operation in 1980 and spent his entire career with us in the Woodlands Department. What started as a job quickly became a lifelong passion. After a few years designing cut blocks and roads, Ray became our Silviculture Supervisor—caring for the land after harvest, overseeing seedling growth in nurseries, and guiding the planting and nurturing of new forests. Ray had a remarkable memory. He could recall who harvested a block, which seedlings were planted, how dense the stand was, and how the trees grew over the years, even decades later. He brought both science and heart to the work of reforestation—and his passion was infectious. …Ray retired at the end of 2016, after almost 36 years with us. …To Brenda, Ritchie, Andrew, and the entire Van Ingen family—our hearts are with you. We feel this loss deeply too.

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We’re Hiring: Executive Director, WoodWorks BC

Canadian Wood Council
July 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Canadian Wood Council is hiring a new leader to guide its WoodWorks BC program. Based in Vancouver (hybrid), this is a senior role focused on driving market growth, building strategic partnerships, and advancing wood use in construction across British Columbia. The Executive Director will lead a high-impact team, contribute to national market development efforts, and work closely with government, industry, and design professionals to promote innovation and sustainability in the built environment. This is a pivotal leadership role responsible for driving strategic growth, fostering stakeholder relationships, and championing the use of wood in construction. The Executive Director will serve as the principal representative of the program in BC and play a national role in mentoring and supporting Market development staff across Canada. WoodWorks is the market development program of the Canadian Wood Council that seeks to increase the use of wood in non-residential and multi-family building markets across Canada. 

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Toxic effluent, repeated penalties plague BC Domtar mill

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
July 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

SKOOKUMCHUCK, BC — A BC pulp and paper mill has once again been struck with environmental penalties after provincial inspectors found it had discharged acutely toxic effluent into the Kootenay River and failed to properly maintain equipment that treats the facility’s toxic waste. The three penalties to the Domtar’s Skookumchuck, BC, mill span 2022 to 2024 and totalled more than $56,000. They come just over a month after the Ministry of Environment and Parks penalized the mill north of Cranbrook for nearly two dozen failures to control the release of emissions. …Tests carried out on mill effluent in the summer of 2023 found it was toxic to trout. Domtar submitted that the toxicity only lasted for a short duration. Environmental Management Act Jennifer Mayberry determined the violations were of a medium severity. …A spokesperson for Domtar said the company planned to appeal parts of the decision.

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Maine’s Hammond Lumber buying competitor, adding a dozen locations

By Adam Bartow
WWMT-TV
July 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Hammond Lumber Company, founded in Belgrade and the second largest family-owned business in Maine, is expanding. The company announced Tuesday morning it is buying Ware-Butler Building Supply, allowing Hammond to expand its retail footprint from 22 to 34 locations across Maine and New Hampshire. The deal is expected to close on July 31. Terms of the sale were not announced Tuesday. The transaction includes 15 Ware-Butler retail locations in Maine: Corinth, Dixfield, Dover-Foxcroft, Gorham, Greenville, Kingfield, Livermore Falls, Madison (Route 201), Madison (Main Street), Mexico, Orrington, Palmyra, Stillwater (Old Town), Waterville, and West Enfield. Hammond will consolidate the Dixfield, Greenville, and Orrington locations into existing nearby Hammond branches. All Ware-Butler employees will be offered continued employment, including relocation to nearby branches when possible.

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Lionel Landry, former SFPA President, died July 15. He was 85

Southern Forest Products Association
July 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Lionel Landry

Lionel Landry, a former president of the Southern Forest Products Association and the longest-serving director of the Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition (EXPO) who worked at SFPA from 1966-2005, passed away Tuesday, July 15. He was 85. Lionel began his career with the Southern Pine Association (which became SFPA in 1970) in 1966 as office manager. He was promoted to corporate secretary and EXPO director three years later. …Lionel served as director of 18 EXPOs from 1967-2001, which included 10 in Atlanta and five in New Orleans. During that time, he assisted Keith Judkins on the 14th EXPO, then John Zin with the 15th and 16th EXPOs. Lionel succeeded Karl Lindberg as SFPA president in 2003 and retired December 31, 2005, at which time Digges Morgan took over. …Lionel also served as chairman of the International Association of Exhibitions & Events (IAEE) in 1973.

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Making wood work for Wales

Welsh Government News
July 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Wales launches its first Timber Industrial Strategy today, to capitalise on growing global demand for timber, which is expected to quadruple by 2050. Deputy First Minister Huw Irranca-Davies will be launching ‘Making Wood Work for Wales’ at the Royal Welsh Show on 22 July 2025. The new strategy represents years of collaboration with Wales’s timber sector and follows extensive public consultation. It aims to increase both the scale and value of timber grown and timber products produced across Wales. Greater use of timber in construction will secure the forest industry’s future, supporting new investment, jobs and improved carbon outcomes. Recruiting skilled workers is becoming increasingly important as the industry expands. The strategy will improve communication with young people about forestry careers in Wales, working with Careers Wales and organisations such as the Royal Forestry Society.

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Finance & Economics

Homebuilding alone won’t solve Canada’s housing crisis

By Jake Fuss and Austin Thompson
The Fraser Institute in National Newswatch
July 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

During April’s election campaign, the Carney government promised to double the pace of homebuilding in Canada by 2035—an unlikely outcome in light of Canada’s shortage of construction workers and investment dollars. But even if homebuilding were miraculously doubled, it would not solve Canada’s housing affordability crisis. That’s the sobering conclusion of a recent report from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), which modelled what would happen if the rate of homebuilding between 2025 and 2035 were double what it is today. Even under this hypothetical decade-long homebuilding bonanza, average home prices would still rise by 20 per cent in Toronto (to $1.4 million) and eight per cent in Vancouver (to $1.6 million), while nationwide rents would climb by more than one-third. Housing affordability would gradually improve as incomes rise, but by 2035 it would only return to 2019 levels, when many renters and homebuyers were already struggling to afford a home.

In related Fraser Institute news: Alberta sets pace on new housing construction—rest of Canada should catch up

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The Conference Board Leading Economic Index for the US Declined in June

The Conference Board
July 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index® (LEI) for the US declined by 0.3% in June 2025 to 98.8 (2016=100), after no change in May. As a result, the LEI fell by 2.8% over the first half of 2025, a substantially faster rate of decline than the –1.3% contraction over the second half of 2024 “The US LEI fell further in June,” said Justyna Zabinska-La Monica at The Conference Board. “For a second month in a row, the stock price rally was the main support of the LEI. But this was not enough to offset still very low consumer expectations, weak new orders in manufacturing, and a third consecutive month of rising initial claims for unemployment insurance. In addition, the LEI’s six-month growth rate weakened, while the diffusion index over the past six months remained below 50, triggering the recession signal for a third consecutive month. 

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Georgia Forestry Association Leverages Data in Latest Land Use Report

GlobeNewswire Press Release
July 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

The Georgia Forestry Association’s latest report, Shifting Ground, draws on land transaction insights to examine how forest ownership and land use are evolving across the state. Featured in the Summer 2025 issue of Georgia Forestry magazine, the report carries the “Powered by Acres” designation, a mark that signals credible, data-backed research built on the Acres platform. The analysis examines key trends influencing Georgia’s forestland market, including generational turnover, external investment, and the emergence of diversified income streams, including hunting leases, carbon credits, and solar development. Acres’ data shows forestland sales in Georgia have remained strong at $3.5 to $4 billion annually since 2020, with average price per acre holding firm despite broader economic fluctuations. “Access to transparent, reliable data is essential to understanding how Georgia’s forest landscape is changing,” said Tim Lowrimore, President and CEO of the Georgia Forestry Association.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canadian Wood Council Applauds Nova Scotia’s Prioritization of Wood Products for Construction and Heating in Public Buildings

Canadian Wood Council
July 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – The Canadian Wood Council (CWC) applauds the Province of Nova Scotia’s recent announcement regarding the prioritization of wood products for construction and heating in public buildings – a strategic move that supports economic growth, climate resilience, and innovation in the province’s forestry sector. By committing to mass timber and other solid wood products for construction, alongside the use of wood pellets, biomass, and other products made from forest residuals for heat and energy, Nova Scotia is taking a leadership approach to development that aligns environmental stewardship with economic opportunity. This initiative reinforces the principles of a circular economy built on sustainable forest management. This comprehensive approach to fibre utilization ensures the province is maximizing the value of harvested wood and reducing waste while simultaneously supporting jobs, stimulating rural economies, and strengthening local and regional supply chains across the forestry and construction sectors.

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Forestry

“Fires, Closures, and Loss” with Kim Haakstad + Jess Ketchum

Hotel Pacifico
YouTube
July 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mike McDonald and Geoff Meggs welcome Kim Haakstad, president and CEO of the Council of Forest Industries, to Hotel Pacifico. They discuss the troubling state of the industry, impacts of government policy, low harvest levels, and other factors leading to job losses and mill closures. Haakstad prescribes measures that will help get forestry on the comeback trail. In the Strategy Suite, Mike and Geoff are joined by longtime public affairs advisor and media commentator Jess Ketchum. The trio touch on forestry, summer to do list for Premier Eby and John Rustad, crime and addiction, the politics of measles, and how one industry association is leaving no Stone unturned.

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Woodlots BC to Lead Province-Wide Wildfire Risk Reduction Efforts on Woodlots

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
July 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kamloops, B.C.– The Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) recently approved up to $1.7 million to the Woodlot Product Development Council (Woodlots BC) to carry out wildfire risk reduction treatments over a 2-year fiscal period. Treatments will be conducted on woodlots throughout British Columbia, each located within a Wildland Urban Interface, endorsed by the local Forestry District and following BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) wildfire risk reduction standards. Through this work, Woodlots BC looks forward to building capacity across the forest sector and helping promote innovative ways to complete treatment of wildfire risk reduction projects to reduce combustible forest fuel loading, thereby better protecting communities. “Woodlots are vital to B.C.’s forestry sector as they support local jobs, keep our forests healthy, and help reduce wildfire risk where it matters most: right where people live,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. 

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Regrowing Alberta’s Forests

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
July 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Corey Hogan and Mike Toffan

The Government of Canada, together with Indigenous communities, private and non-profit sector leaders, and provincial partners, is taking action to regenerate Alberta’s forests — protecting clean air and preserving the province’s vast natural landscapes for generations to come. Corey Hogan, Parliamentary Secretary to the Honourable Tim Hodgson, Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced, in collaboration with Project Forest, The Carbon Farmer and FIND Biomass Inc, a joint investment of over $125 million for four projects that will plant 12 million trees and restore critical habitat for species at risk throughout Alberta, such as caribou. Investments will help to create and restore biodiverse forests and wildlife habitat and sequester carbon while creating seasonal and full-time jobs for surrounding communities in Alberta. We are not just planting trees — we are building a stronger, healthier and more-resilient Canada.

Additional coverage in Global News, by Bill Graveland: Unproductive Alberta farmland to be converted back to forest

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Burlington recognized for the third time as a world wide forestry leader

The Burlington Gazette
July 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

BURLINGTON, Ontario — Burlington has once again been recognized as a tree city by the World Arbor Day Foundation and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. This marks the third consecutive year that the city has received this honor, highlighting Burlington continued leadership in urban forestry and our commitment to protecting and enhancing tree canopy. Director of Roads, Parks and Forestry, Enrico Scalera, said… “These standards demonstrate a commitment to urban forestry and sustainable practices, which our forestry group exemplifies each and every day for our city. We also invest in our urban forestry and tree canopy: this year’s total forestry budget is $5.48 million.” …Rico Scaleri: : “We’ve embraced innovation such as the Middle Way conversion project along the Crosstown trail, and have a partnership with the University of Toronto to monitor forest health using drone technology.”

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US faces alarming shortage of firefighters during peak wildfire season, data reveals

By Gabrielle Canon
The Guardian
July 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

More than a quarter of firefighting positions at the United States Forest Service (USFS) remain vacant, according to internal data reviewed by the Guardian, creating staffing shortages as extreme conditions fuel dozens of blazes across the US. The data paints a dangerously different picture than the one offered by Tom Schultz, the chief of the USFS, who has repeatedly assured lawmakers and the public that the agency is fully prepared for the onslaught in fire activity expected through this year. It’s already been busy. So far this year there have been more than 41,000 wildfires – an amount nearly 31% higher than the ten-year average. “In terms of firefighting capacity we are there,” Schultz said during a Senate committee hearing on 10 July, claiming the USFS had hit 99% of hiring goals. He repeated the claim multiple times.

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Repairing a watershed: Local control is a path toward healthier forest

By Riley Yuan
The Chinook Observer
July 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

After months of deliberation, a years-old vision to restore local control of some of Pacific and Wahkiakum counties’ most productive timberlands is a step closer to becoming a reality. Last Tuesday, representatives from the Columbia Land Trust presented to both sets of commissioners a near-complete draft of the charter for the Upper Grays River Community Forest. The document lays out the legal framework and governance structure for a working forest in the upper Grays River watershed, which will straddle the boundary between the two counties. “The purpose… is to provide a legal entity… to undertake, assist with and otherwise facilitate the acquisition, ownership, maintenance, harvest, and management of a community forest or forests within Pacific County and Wahkiakum County to provide economic, environmental and community benefits to the public,” the charter’s fourth article reads.

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Will Increased Timber Harvesting on Federal Lands Reduce Growing Wildfire Hazards?

By Matthew Wibbenmeyer and David N. Wear
Resources for the Future – Report
July 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

On March 1, 2025, President Trump issued an executive order directing the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior to develop plans to increase timber production on federal lands. The order was motivated by two stated priorities: expanding the timber supply and addressing rising wildfire risks. The US Forest Service has responded with a goal of increasing timber offered for sale by 25 percent over the next four to five years. This report puts the Trump administration’s actions into context by reviewing the history of harvest from federal lands and evaluating current forest inventories and treatment needs. It asks: What would be the effect on wildfire risk if federal land management agencies increased harvests by 25 percent? Opportunities for harvests that successfully mitigate risk may be limited by the absence of active timber markets, the availability of a qualified workforce, and the economics of fuel removals.

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A plan to shoot 450,000 owls — to save a different owl — could be in jeopardy

By Lila Seidman
The LA Times
July 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

An unusual alliance of Republican lawmakers and animal rights advocates, together with others, is creating storm clouds for a plan to protect one threatened owl by killing a more common one. Last August, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service approved a plan to shoot roughly 450,000 barred owls in California, Oregon and Washington over three decades. The barred owls have been out-competing imperiled northern spotted owls in the Pacific Northwest, as well as California spotted owls, pushing them out of their territory. Supporters of the approach — including conservation groups and prominent scientists — believe the cull is necessary to avert disastrous consequences for the spotted owls. Last month, The Times has found, federal officials canceled three owl-related grants to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife totaling roughly $1.1 million, including one study that would remove barred owls from over 192,000 acres in Mendocino and Sonoma counties.

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Climate Change Is Making Fire Weather Worse for World’s Forests

By Rebecca Dzombak
The New York Times
July 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In 2023 and 2024, the hottest years on record, more than 78 million acres of forests burned around the globe. The fires sent veils of smoke and several billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, subjecting millions of people to poor air quality. Extreme forest-fire years are becoming more common because of climate change, new research suggests. Boreal forests lost more than two times the canopy area in 2023-24 compared with the period between 2002 and 2022, the study found. Tropical forests saw three times as much loss, and North American forests lost nearly four times as much canopy, mostly because of Canada’s wildfires. Significant losses were in remote forests, far from human activities. That isolation suggests fires are increasing primarily because of climate change, said Calum Cunningham, a fire geographer at the University of Tasmania who was not involved with the study. “Chronic changes in climate are making these forests more conducive to burning,” Dr. Cunningham said. [a paid subscription is required to read this article]

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Threads of the Tongass: Building a sustainable future

By Jasz Garrett
The Juneau Empire
July 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The days of clear-cutting the Tongass National Forest are over, with little chance of reviving the past. The Alaska Forest Association, tribal members, and environmentalists say a new future must be charted. Since the Clinton administration implemented the Roadless Rule in 2001, construction of new roads in wild areas of most national forests has been blocked. With no more roads being built and few companies willing to barge out the wood, it is difficult to imagine the return of mass logging. Timber operators expected to harvest 46 million board feet per year, a mix of young and old-growth, based on the 2016 Tongass Land and Resource Management plan. Viking Lumber Company in Klawock and Alcan Timber in Ketchikan acknowledge the time needed to transition to young-growth harvesting. “Threads of the Tongass” is a series of stories that explore how lives in Southeast Alaska are interwoven with the Tongass National Forest during a time of political, cultural and environmental change.

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Groups sue US Fish and Wildlife Service over protections for red tree vole on Oregon Coast

By Rose Shimberg
The Salem Statesman Journal
July 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Conservation groups sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on July 17 for denying Endangered Species Act (ESA) protections to the north Oregon Coast population of red tree voles. The lawsuit, filed by the Center for Biological Diversity, Bird Alliance of Oregon, Oregon Wild and Cascadia Wildlands, claims the USFWS’ February 2024 decision that the population was not warranted for ESA protections deprives it of critical protections necessary to ensure its survival. “Red tree voles have graced Oregon’s coastal old-growth forests for thousands of years, but we could lose them forever if they don’t get Endangered Species Act protections soon,” said Ryan Shannon, a senior attorney in the Center for Biological Diversity’s endangered species program. …Due to decades of logging, this population has been eliminated from most of its historic range. It also faces an existential threat from wildfire that is worsening under climate change, according to the lawsuit. 

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In Ukraine’s bombed out reservoir a huge forest has grown – is it a return to life or a toxic timebomb?

By Vincent Mundy
The Guardian
July 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

At the southern tip of Europe’s largest river island, the ground falls away into a vast and unexpected vista. From a high, rocky ledge on Khortytsia Island, the view opens on to a sea of swaying young willows and mirrored lagoons. Some of the trees are already many metres tall, but this is a young forest. Just a few years ago, all of it was under water. “This is Velykyi Luh – the Great Meadow,” says Valeriy Babko, a retired history teacher and army veteran, standing on the former reservoir shoreline at Malokaterynivka village. For him, this extraordinary new-old environment represents more than nature alone. “It is an ancient, mythic terrain, woven through Ukrainian folklore,” he says. “Think of all those Cossacks galloping through its valleys of forests so dense the sun barely pierced them.”

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Want a Carbon Fix? It’s Closer than You Think

By Kristen de Jager, UBC journalism student
The Tyee
July 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

…The Tyee looked at three critical and vastly different means to store carbon in the West, examining how these ecosystems capture carbon, the restoration work they require and why Canada should take them seriously as solutions. …Peatlands are a type of wetland found all over Canada. In the West, they are found in northern B.C. and Alberta. …However, they come with a catch; as much as they absorb carbon, they also emit methane. …Kelp is one of the newest potentials for natural climate solutions and carbon sequestration in Canada. …It is hard for researchers to fully evaluate how much kelp carbon is sequestered in the deep oceans in the long term. …Trees are one of the world’s largest carbon sinks. Like peat, trees sequester carbon through photosynthesis. As trees grow, they take in carbon from the air around them and store it in their wood, soil and plant matter

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Trump bill takes a ‘big, beautiful’ bite out of US climate progress

By Rachel Frazin
KTSM News
July 21, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

The megabill President Trump signed into law this month is expected to make a major dent in the U.S.’s climate progress, adding significantly more planet-warming emissions to the atmosphere. Models of the legislation that have emerged since its passage earlier this month show U.S. emissions will rise as a result of its implementation. One from climate think tank C2ES found U.S. emissions will be 8 percent more than they would have been otherwise as a result of the package. “An 8% increase in our emissions is … still a massive amount of emissions,” said Brad Townsend, the group’s vice president for policy and outreach. Taking into account all of the efforts to reduce U.S. emissions over the last 20 years, Townsend said, the bill represents “rolling back a third of that progress with a stroke of a pen.” “From an emissions perspective, this bill is a disaster,” he said.

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Chestnut Carbon Announces Pioneering Non-Recourse Project Financing for U.S. Afforestation in the Voluntary Carbon Market

By Chestnut Carbon
PR Newswire
July 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

NEW YORK — Chestnut Carbon, a nature-based carbon removal developer, announced the successful closing of a landmark non-recourse project finance credit facility of up to $210,000,000—a first-of-its-kind bank financing for a U.S. voluntary carbon removal afforestation project. Led by J.P. Morgan and a syndicate of leading lenders including CoBank, Bank of Montreal, and East West Bank, this transaction marks a pivotal step towards achieving increasing commercial scale for both the company and the broader voluntary carbon market and U.S. afforestation space. This innovative credit facility uses the long-term carbon removal supply agreement executed earlier this year between Chestnut and Microsoft Corporation, which reflects one of the largest carbon removal agreements in the U.S. The success of the financing also demonstrates that this asset class can be structured as investable, bankable assets, like more established infrastructure classes.

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A new life for sawmills: Haris Gilani leads wood products innovation project

By Grace N Dean
University of California, Riverside
July 21, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

When seeking to make forests more fire resilient, removing fuels from the landscape is a tough task to make cost-effective. Thinning and limbing trees during fuels reduction treatments will sometimes produce marketable timber, but more often will produce small-diameter wood pieces that have traditionally been considered unmarketable. These pieces are typically chipped, masticated, or pile burned, and have long been considered ‘wood waste’.  California researchers, industry leaders, and private forest landowners have been looking at ways to transform forest wood waste, particularly in wildfire-prone areas, into sustainable products. Utilizing forest biomass for building materials, soil amendments, and clean energy is a key strategy to economically incentivize improving forest conditions and can address both public and private industry needs. The state has also been making moves to decrease greenhouse gas emissions and aims to eliminate emissions entirely by 2045. 

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Forest Fires

After 2011 wildfire, Slave Lake better prepared amid current evacuation alert

By Karen Bartko
Global News
July 21, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

A northern Alberta community that’s no stranger to the devastation of a wildfire is on standby to flee if needed. After lightning from a thunderstorm sparked a fire on Sunday in the Municipal District of Lesser Slave River, an evacuation alert was issued both for the rural area surrounding the blaze, as well as for the town of Slave Lake — which was razed by one of Alberta’s costliest wildfires in 2011. At the time, nearly 400 homes and businesses, including an apartment complex and town hall, were reduced to ash and rubble when fierce winds whipped flames through the town north of Edmonton with little warning. Damages were pegged at $700 million …In the nearly 15 years since the Slave Lake wildfire, the community has made changes from lessons observed at home and elsewhere. One such change: modifying fire trucks so they can be more responsive to wildfires, not just structure fires in town.

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Slew of wildfires now ‘being held’ amid rainfall and cool temperatures

By Steve Berard
Energetic City
July 21, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

FORT NELSON, B.C. — The wildfire situation in the northeast has de-escalated significantly over the weekend amid cooler temperatures and increased precipitation. According to the latest update from the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), a slew of fires have had their designation changed from ‘out of control’ to ‘being held,’ meaning they’re no longer expected to keep expanding past their current perimeters. … BCWS says it expects dryer weather to return to southern parts of the province while a cold front carries cooler temperatures and precipitation to the north. …Meanwhile, the largest wildfire in the province, located in the Etcho Creek region, remains out of control.

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