Canadian Fires Hit Mills, Loggers, Big Acreage
What’s being called Canada’s worst-ever spring fire season has torched 9.9 million acres as mills and loggers across the country take extensive downtime as thousands have been evacuated and drifting smoke has blanketed the Northeast U.S.
Blazes have affected forest operations in British Columbia, Alberta and Quebec and forced downtime at dozens of facilities and restricted timber harvesting activities, say officials with the Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC). For example, Resolute Forest Products closed four Quebec sawmills temporarily, and Chantiers Chibougamau was forced to temporarily shut its Nordic Kraft pulp mill in Lebel-sur-Quevillon, Quebec.
A recent Reuters news story noted that the closures have affected lumber prices, since Canada is the world’s second-largest softwood lumber producer and reported that Chicago lumber futures for July delivery have climbed 7% since June 1.
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Purdue Grant Focuses On Forest Development
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture has awarded a $10 million grant to Purdue University to help landowners and stakeholders better adapt their forests to increasingly complicated economic and climate conditions in the Eastern U.S. About 5 million small, private landowners control just over half the acreage of forests in the Eastern U.S. This contrasts with Western U.S. forests, which are mostly publicly owned. Purdue and its project partners—the University of Georgia, the University of Maine and the U.S. Forest Service—aim to improve the management of 15 million acres of those forests, an area nearly as large as…
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