Header: Header: Header:

Oregon Facing Danger Signs

Article by Dan Shell, Senior Editor, Timber Processing April 2024

The state may be the top U.S. lumber producer right now, but log supply in Oregon the past 30 years or so has been an uneasy balance of private, federal (Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management) and state timberlands. Now, with state and private timber owners taking a regulatory harvest reduction, it’s more important than ever for federal officials to meet—and ideally increase—timber harvest levels to help maintain that balance.

Officials with the American Forest Resource Council (AFRC) are sounding the alarm after three mill closures announced in Oregon this year: Hampton Lumber’s Banks mill, Interfor’s Philomath mill, and a two-year sawmill closure announced by Rosboro in Springfield while a new glulam plant is being constructed. In all three cases, the companies involved cited ongoing uncertainty over log supply as contributing to the closure decisions.

Also adding to raw material concerns is the ongoing impact of Oregon’s September 2020 wildfires that burned 971,000 acres of timberland and destroyed 15 billion BF of green timber with more than $30 billion in end-product value, according to an Oregon Forest Resources Institute report.

 

AFRC President Travis Joseph and organization members are urging the Pacific Northwest congressional delegation to take steps to help reverse the trend of more mill closures. This includes more active oversight to ensure the FS and BLM meet and increase timber harvest goals.

Maintaining a healthy and robust forest industry sector is also a key component of addressing federal forest health and wildfire issues. An additional $6 billion outlay to the FS and BLM to increase the pace and scope of forest treatments and stewardship projects hasn’t yielded an uptick in log supply that traditionally accompanies such projects, Joseph says, noting that the BLM’s western Oregon timber sale program this year has been arbitrarily reduced by more than 25%.

The group is also taking the long view on the issue of maintaining a vibrant forest industry sector. The cautionary tale is Arizona, where years of federal forest management neglect allowed forest industry infrastructure to almost disappear. And now, the state is still struggling to develop the timber processing and utilization facilities to make a difference in forest health operations.

There’s also the role of wood building materials and other wood products that sequester carbon permanently and help decarbonization efforts. It’s a sustainable industry that produces sustainable products.

Joseph adds: “If the Federal Government is going to be successful in addressing the current federal forest health and wildfire crises – and protect the extraordinary social, environmental, economic, and cultural values of our public lands – it must sustain and grow the forest infrastructure and related workforces.”

Latest News

GE Capital Closes On Loan For 84 Lumber Company

GE Capital Corporate Finance recently announced it is co-collateral agent and documentation agent for a $225 million asset-based loan for 84 Lumber Company, one of the nation’s leading privately-held building materials and services suppliers to professional...

Log, Lumber Prices Put Squeeze On Western Sawmills

Results of a multi‐client benchmarking study show that in spite of operational improvements, dimension lumber mills in the U.S. West have struggled to overcome the narrowing gap between log prices and lumber selling values. The study included 10 dimension lumber...

Canfor Completes Tembec Transaction

Canfor has completed the acquisition of the Tembec Industries Ltd.’s southern British Columbia interior wood products assets consisting of the Elko and Canal Flats sawmills and approximately 1.1 million m3 of combined Crown, private land and contract annual allowable...

U.S. Lumber Lobby Threatens To Thwart Canada In Trade Deal

The powerful softwood lumber lobby in the United States is suggesting it could thwart Canada's efforts to join a Pacific free trade zone if its neighbor refuses to address long-standing irritants. Zoltan van Heyningen, executive director of the U.S. Lumber Coalition,...

U.S. Claims B.C. Loggers Violating Softwood Lumber Deal

The American lumber lobby says the B.C. government has been under-charging coastal forest companies for timber harvested on Crown lands to the tune of $70 million a year. And that throws into question the accuracy of B.C.'s marketpricing system, according to the U.S....

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.