North America’s forest products sector pivots: supply, sustainability and strategy in focus

Uncover insights on North America’s forest products and the future of pulp and paper from key industry leaders.

At the newly re-branded Fastmarkets’ Forest Products North America and International Containerboard Conference held in Miami, Florida, on October 14-16, industry leaders mapped out how pulp, paper, and packaging players must adapt to shifting demand, raw-material constraints, sustainability pressures and consolidation.

This year’s conference speakers emphasised that the future of the industry lies in integrated strategy.

From the ground up, fibre availability was flagged as a growing issue. Participants discussed how mills are managing supply, higher input costs and logistics bottlenecks. On the demand side, while consumption of graphic grades remains challenged, the paper packaging side is under spotlight — though with caution. Despite weak box volume growth, capacity rationalisation and innovation are shifting the playing field.

Executives cited that they have been increasingly framing their strategies around fewer, stronger customers, margin improvement and capital efficiency. For example, one of the main addresses by International Paper (IP) CEO Andrew Silvernail outlined a plan to drive its sustainable packaging business to a 20% margin by 2028, which involves permanent closures of containerboard capacity as well as converting and recycling plants, but also reinvestments in high-value assets.

Blazer, Clothing, Coat
International Paper (IP) CEO Andrew  Silvernail and Fastmarkets CEO Raju Daswani

Silvernail urged his team to stay focused on the long-term pathway, accelerating changes when needed and never losing sight of the company’s strategic goals. “The most important thing is to have the courage to keep at the strategy and not let go of it with the winds that are changing. It will not be perfect, but you got to stick with it. And to stick with it, you have to have conviction about what is the right thing to do to win in the market long term,” Silvernail said.

Get these insights in person. Join us for the Fastmarkets Forest Products Europe Conference 2026 with over 130 pulp, paper and packaging companies.

The conference keynote speaker Luigi Lazzareschi, CEO of Sofidel, mentioned that the two major challenges for the paper industry to grow in North America are high labor turnover and high cost of investments.

“It’s difficult to retain people … the turnover is very high, and the [employees’] loyalty is very low. … Another big challenge in the US is that the cost of investment is very high, even though there’s lack of supply [of tissue paper]. …So, we have low productivity and high costs,” Lazzareschi stated.

Unclear trade flows and tariff regimes remain a drag, especially for containerboard and recovered paper exports as well as pulp and paper imports.

People, Person, Crowd
Derek Mahlburg presenting at the Fastmarkets’ Forest Products North America and International Containerboard Conference 2025. His presentation is on containerboard trends and the macro-outlook for the sector

Also, a standalone focus on capacity closures, growth corridors and expected tightness in 2026-27 gave attendees a forward-looking view of when prices might recover.

Technology and innovation focus. From automation in paper machines and corrugators to AI-driven process controls, digital tools were showcased as a path to cost-control, flexibility and competitive advantage during a discussion panel on October 15.

Also, a session on the “Future of e-commerce packaging” explored how consumer-behaviour changes are forcing packaging converters to rethink design, lightweighting and sustainability trade-offs. End-users and brand owners are asking more from packaging suppliers: lighter, more sustainable, digitally-enabled boxes.

What’s next for North America’s forest products industry: a changing market outlook

Looking ahead, the market is entering a phase of adjustment. While the macro setting is weak, the structural responses — capacity rationalisation, fibre supply re-arrangement, packaging innovation — are well underway. For participants, the conference message was clear: align your business for resilience, not just recovery.

Interested in getting more insights like this first hand? You can register now to attend the Fastmarkets Forest Products Europe Conference 2026 in Barcelona, Spain.

Case Study

Learn how to monitor packaging prices using cost and price indices and understand the underlying cost drivers, from material cost to labor, energy and more. Examples include cartonboard, liquid container and paper bag.

What to read next
Toyota’s $3.6 billion investment to build a new assembly line in San Antonio, Texas, will shift demand for US steel and auto parts from Mexico to the US, according to market analysts.
Key takeaways: Read our full analysis to understand how tariffs and policy uncertainty are moving through the wood products supply chain and shaping the 2026 market and beyond. The North American wood products market entered 2026 carrying the strain of a difficult 2025. Weaker housing starts, modest repair and remodeling activity and declining furniture production kept demand under […]
Following an internal editorial review, Fastmarkets identified that nonwovens assessments published on July 1, 2026, did not fully reflect the consistent application of its published assessment methodology. To ensure the methodology is applied consistently and that the assessments appropriately reflect observed market conditions and prevailing trading practices, the following assessments have been corrected:
Brazilian tissue jumbo roll prices remained stable despite rising input costs, as persistent oversupply and competitive pressures delayed planned increases.
A massive $600B wave of AI capex is crowding out residential construction, keeping interest rates high and suppressing North American wood products demand through 2026.
Fastmarkets has corrected the rationale for its MB-AL-0020 aluminium P1020A premium, ddp Midwest US, US cents/lb assessment, which was published incorrectly on Tuesday July 7.