 Every year, Canada's report presents this biased account and every year we roll our eyes. The problem? Canada and the forest industry use this report to convince the world that all is well in the woods and to market products that are made from forests in Canada as sustainable, including disposable products such as toilet paper that could be made from 100% recycled material. Canada has a history of boom and bust where we tend to over-exploit a resource until it's gone. So it's absolutely critical that we get an accurate account of how much has been logged and how much unlogged forest is left. We owe it to forests depending on communities, wildlife, and biodiversity to report this transparently. Canada's continued reliance on going ever further to log new areas of primary forest is one of the best indicators that we're logging unsustainably. If species are in decline due to human activity in the forest, including logging, we need to know that. A key part of reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in Canada relies upon having free, prior, and informed consent in matters related to land use, including forestry. This in turn relies on everyone involved having access to accurate, unbiased information that reflects the full suite of forest values. Not having this info is allowing for industry to claim that the reason that it's running out of easy-to-access timber is because of forest protection. This report fails to tell us key information that we need to know and instead serves as a greenwashing tactic that pretends like everything is okay when clearly it's not. To call on Canada to stop publishing this dust and get real with science and facts, click the link to get involved.