Agende on your calendar - AWFS Las Vegas 22. - 25. July 2025 -
International Wood Processing Fair and Furniture Manufacture
IWF attends to the worlds largest carpentry market with an unmatched presentation of the most recent technology in the industry that drives machinery, components, materials, trends, intellectual leadership and learning. The Commercial Fair and the Conference are the destination chosen by tens of thousands of attendees representing more than 30 commercial sectors. IWF attendees experience everything new and what comes in manufacturing, innovation, product design, learning, networks and emerging sectors in the largest carpentry event in North America. For the world carpentry community, from small workshops to large manufacturers, IWF is the place where the carpentry business does business.
IT MAY INTEREST YOU
Architecture with identity: university students from Argentina and Paraguay design and build with missionary wood
The Faculty of Art and Design (FAyD) of the National University of Misiones (UNaM) hosted the inauguration of the first edition of “Yvyvyrá: territory, matter and architecture”, an international workshop that promotes learning, experimentation and architectural design using wood and other materials typical of the biomes of the Atlantic Forest (Paranaense Forest) and the Humid Chaco.
Specialists from 10 provinces develop forest landscape restoration strategies throughout the country
The program is developed by researchers from INTA, Conicet and the Argentine Wildlife Foundation.
Missions | New illegal felling in the Piñalito Provincial Park in San Pedro reveals the silent expansion of deforestation in protected areas
The advance of deforestation on protected areas was once again evident this week in the Piñalito Sur Provincial Park, in San Pedro, where the Ministry of Ecology and Renewable Natural Resources confirmed a new case of selective illegal logging. The event occurs in a context of growing concern about the fragility of the environmental control system in rural and border areas, where the scarcity of resources, personnel and logistics limits the capacity of surveillance against criminal organizations organized to steal native woods and market them on the black market in connivance with sawmill owners.




















