News in timber


Dixie Wildfire Burnt Timber to Help Rebuild Destroyed Communities

The scars of last summer’s Dixie Fire can be clearly seen for miles in burnt California hillside and forestland. However, there is hope. The burnt timber has value and the newly created sawmill in Crescent Mills, California, is working as quickly as possible to convert those burnt timbers into viable lumber products that can be used to rebuild the area.

U.S. National Interagency Fire Center Wildfire Update for June 6, 2022

On Monday, the U.S. National Interagency Fire Center reported that the 2022 wildfire season continues to gain momentum and is currently at a at a pace that is well in excess of both 2021 and its 10-year average. Currently, more than 4,100 wildland firefighters and support personnel are assigned to incidents across the country.

Maine’s Plan For Wood-Fired Power Plants Draws Both Praise and Doubts

In April, Maine Gov. Janet Mills signed into law legislation that establishes a program to commission projects that will burn wood to create electricity and also capture the heat produced for use on-site—heat that would go to waste in a conventional power plant. Some climate activists are cynical, saying questions remain as to whether the program will cut carbon emissions as intended.

B.C.’s Old-Growth Logging Deferrals by the Numbers

The BC government is continuing to work through a process, which is already underway, to temporarily defer logging in priority old-growth forests. In turn, it allows the government time to work with First Nations to decide how they should be managed in the long term. Experts had identified 2.6 million hectares of unprotected old-growth forest at risk of permanent biodiversity loss.