By Don Urquhart, Times Chronicle

A national horticultural association is sounding the alarm after new data shows a “staggering gap” in Canada’s post-wildfire forest restoration efforts. 

The Canadian Tree Nursery Association (CTNA) says current programs are restoring only a small fraction of forests lost to recent wildfires and is calling for “immediate and substantive action” from provincial and federal governments to dramatically increase commitments to restoring wildfire-impacted forests.

Speaking at the Western Forest Contractors Association (WFCA) Annual General Meeting and Conference in Victoria from Jan. 28-30, Rob Keen, RPF, Executive Director of the CTNA warned that more than 7.3 billion seedlings are required to restore just 15 per cent of the forests destroyed by wildfires between 2023 and 2025 – more than 10 times Canada’s current annual seedling production capacity.

“The crisis is compounded by a troubling biological trend – the declining ability of forests to regenerate naturally after more frequent and higher-intensity wildfires,” said Keen. 

“We are seeing a significant reduction in natural regeneration following these fires. Without a massive, coordinated planting effort, we risk losing public assets, biodiversity, and the carbon sequestration benefits these forests provide for generations.”

According to The Economic Value of Canada’s Tree Nursery Sector report, the sector generates $256.3 million in annual revenue, contributes $535.4 million to Canada’s GDP, and supports 4,378 full-time equivalent jobs, primarily in rural communities.

The CTNA is calling on the Prime Minister, Premiers, and Ministers responsible for forests to “act now to secure the future of Canada’s Crown forests”.

Despite a rapidly escalating need, restoration efforts are being undermined by funding instability and declining production capacity, the WFCA argues. 

In BC, seedling production is projected to fall from 300 million in 2024 to 226 million by 2026. Quebec’s annual planting is projected to decrease from 143 million seedlings in 2023 to 125 million by 2026. 

In Saskatchewan, recent fires have devastated production forests, yet no proactive restoration measures are currently in place, the Association says. 

At the federal level, the Two Billion Trees Program, which previously supported restoration initiatives, has been dismantled.

“Planning and growing the right tree for the right site takes two to four years,” Keen explained. “Our sector depends on long-term, predictable commitments to sustain infrastructure and retain a skilled workforce. A multi-year biological process cannot be managed through stop-and-go funding cycles.”

To address this, the CTNA-ACPF is calling for the creation of a National Post-Wildfire Forest Restoration Program with the following objectives:

  • Establish a National Forest Restoration Task Team bringing together regional, provincial, First Nation, and federal experts to coordinate a practical and regionally responsive recovery effort;
  • Bridge the growing natural regeneration gap by applying the latest forest restoration science to identify areas where natural recovery is no longer viable;
  • Rapidly identify priority reforestation areas to improve long-term climate resilience;
  • Coordinate restoration logistics, including damage assessments, seed collection, nursery production, planting, and monitoring;
  • Foster Indigenous partnerships that integrate traditional knowledge with Western science to strengthen forest resilience;
  • Grant “Major Project” status to large-scale reforestation initiatives through the Major Projects Office or other federal programs to ensure long-term stability and economic growth.

“Our nurseries are vital employers in rural Canada,” added Keen. “Strategic investment in forest restoration will not only protect climate goals but also generate thousands of jobs and support the long-term viability of the forest sector. Tree planting is not a discretionary program – it is a nation-building investment.”

The Canadian Tree Nursery Association represents 64 nurseries across Canada, producing more than 95 per cent of the nation’s forest restoration seedlings – over 720 million annually. Formed in 2023, it is the sole national voice for Canada’s forest nursery sector.