What is Canadian forestry and where is it concentrated?
Answer
Canada is the world's third-largest forest-products exporter, with major operations in British Columbia, Quebec, Ontario, Alberta, and New Brunswick.
Explanation
Forestry is one of Canada's foundational industries, contributing about $25 billion to GDP and supporting more than 200,000 direct jobs in 2023. Canada has 347 million hectares of forest, the third-largest forest cover in the world after Russia and Brazil, and produces softwood lumber, pulp, paper, newsprint, oriented strandboard, plywood, engineered wood products, biomaterials, and bioenergy. Canada is the world's largest exporter of softwood lumber and northern bleached softwood kraft pulp.
The industry is concentrated in five provinces. British Columbia is the largest, producing about half of Canadian softwood lumber from Douglas fir, western hemlock, western red cedar, and lodgepole pine. Quebec, Ontario, and Alberta operate large boreal-forest harvesting and milling operations, with major employers including Canfor, West Fraser Timber, Resolute Forest Products, Domtar, Mercer International, Cascades, and Kruger. New Brunswick's forestry sector centres on J.D. Irving Limited's integrated operation.
Federal-provincial forest tenure is the foundation of the industry. About 90 per cent of Canadian forest is publicly owned, with provinces granting long-term tenures to companies in exchange for stumpage fees, reforestation obligations, and silvicultural management. Crown forest in British Columbia is regulated under the Forest Act and the Forest and Range Practices Act. Provincial Crown corporations including BC Timber Sales and Quebec's Bureau de mise en marché des bois auction timber rights.
The softwood lumber dispute with the United States has recurred in five rounds of duties since 1982. Current U.S. countervailing and anti-dumping duties on most Canadian softwood lumber exports run to about 14 to 20 per cent, with court challenges under both NAFTA's Chapter 19 and CUSMA's Chapter 10 and the World Trade Organization. Climate change is reshaping the sector through wildfires, the mountain pine beetle infestation that killed about 50 per cent of British Columbia's mature lodgepole pine, and policy shifts toward old-growth forest protection. Indigenous-led forestry has grown through joint ventures, equity stakes, and Indigenous-managed tenures.
Why this matters for your test
Forestry has built Canadian towns from northern British Columbia to New Brunswick. Recognising the third-largest forest cover in the world and the softwood lumber dispute history pairs the answer to two specific anchors.
Source: Natural Resources Canada State of Canada's Forests; Forest Products Association of Canada