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B.C. VIEWS: Cutting wood waste produces some bleeding

Value-added industry slowly grows as big sawmills close
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Hammond Cedar employee stacks the high-value wood that remains in demand around the world. The Fraser River site has had a sawmill for more than 100 years, and itsa国际传媒檚 closing by the end of 2019. (Maple Ridge News)

Another bruising week for B.C.sa国际传媒檚 forest industry featured the indefinite shutdown of Tolko Industriessa国际传媒 sawmill at Kelowna, and the halt of what was left of Vancouver Island and Fraser Valley logging by contractors for Teal-Jones Group, which runs three mills in Surrey.

Thatsa国际传媒檚 600 more mill workers either out of a job or soon to be as their log supply runs out, plus contracted loggers and haulers. Add that to Interforsa国际传媒檚 permanent closure of the century-old Hammond Cedar sawmill in Maple Ridge and West Frasersa国际传媒檚 move to sa国际传媒渧ariable operating schedulessa国际传媒 at its sawmills and plywood plants at Williams Lake, Quesnel, 100 Mile House, Chetwynd and Fraser Lake. All in a 10-day period, and all due to the now-familiar mixture of low lumber prices, high log costs, diminished log supply and U.S. trade sanctions.

Teal-Jones added two more factors in its second decision this summer to lay off loggers: sa国际传媒淐urrent high stumpage rates remain high relative to lumber prices, and harvesting costs have been adversely impacted by new regulations to bring out more residual waste fibre.sa国际传媒

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Stumpage, the provincesa国际传媒檚 Crown timber fee, is adjusted quarterly and hasnsa国际传媒檛 kept up with plummeting lumber prices this year. And the NDP has cracked down on residual waste, charging triple stumpage on any wood left behind that is deemed to be economically usable.

Forests Minister Doug Donaldson says the residual wood program is just getting going, defining economic hauling zones, and may need some adjustments. But industry should get used to it. The days of huge slash piles left behind after the sawlogs are trucked out are coming to an end, and not just on the B.C. coast.

sa国际传媒淚sa国际传媒檓 expecting wesa国际传媒檙e going to hear about this in the Interior renewal process that wesa国际传媒檙e undertaking as well,sa国际传媒 Donaldson told me. sa国际传媒淲ood left in slash piles that could be used for other purposes is consistent. The key is ensuring that those policy changes are applied where there is an economic analysis that itsa国际传媒檚 economical to bring that wood out.sa国际传媒

B.C. Liberal forest critic John Rustad says the new residual rules pile on harvesting costs at the worst possible time, and itsa国际传媒檚 backfiring as logging slows rather than running at a loss. Instead of getting extra residual wood, pulp mills are grinding more logs to keep going, he says.

Traditionally, residual fibre is collected by a second logging crew, mainly for pulp. Nowadays we also have pellet manufacturers feeding power plants in Europe, and value-added producers making everything from log homes to windows, doors, siding and other specialty products. Donaldson wants all usable wood taken out on the sa国际传媒渇irst passsa国际传媒 of logging.

Donaldson made his first visit to the Global Buyers Mission event in Whistler last week. Itsa国际传媒檚 the 16th annual trade show held by , the value-added manufacturers group. Held in the ski resort that symbolizes B.C. wood construction world-wide, it had 270 industry representives hosting buyers from 20 countries, including Australia, Mexico, the U.K., the U.S., India, Japan and China.

B.C. Woodsa国际传媒檚 tracking system reports $38 million in sales from the Global Buyers Mission last year, Donaldson said. And some specialty products are made from residual wood that doesnsa国际传媒檛 fit the traditional measure of eight-foot construction lumber.

sa国际传媒淚t aligns well with what wesa国际传媒檙e focused on as the direction for the forest sector in the future, maximizing value rather than just maximizing volume,sa国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淭hatsa国际传媒檚 the way wesa国际传媒檝e got to go.sa国际传媒

Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press Media. Email: tfletcher@blackpress.ca



tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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