The Logger Supply Chain Strain
Article by Dan Shell, Senior Editor, Timber Processing July 2023
During the Southern Forest Products Assn.’s educational sessions at the 2021 event, longtime sawmiller and consultant Huey Long noted that early in his career, one of his mentors said that to help maintain perspective, it’s important to always keep a basic line chart graph showing 20 years of lumber prices on your office wall.
These days, that advice may be as important as ever as lumber prices have fallen from all-time 2021-2022 highs to what looks like relatively “normal” (whatever that might be) prices coming on the heels of interest rate increases that have cooled housing markets, at least until housing surged again May.
The big zig-zags in the lumber price chart the past four years come more than a decade after the “Great Recession” and the lowest lumber prices since the Great Depression.
And just as lumber producers have adjusted operations to changing markets, so have timber harvesting companies, as noted in the report on the 2023 Timber Harvesting Logger Survey. Our affiliate magazine, Timber Harvesting, has conducted an annual loggers’ survey for years, and we thought it would be of interest to show of those results in Timber Processing.
We made a point of comparing the ’23 survey results to those of 2019, before the pandemic and how operations are faring now. One of the interesting data points was a slide toward less profitability for loggers in the past four years, as the percentages of loggers reporting pre-tax margins in several categories dropped significantly.
As a result, the percentage of loggers who rated their business health as “very good” was cut in half from 2019 to 2023, and the percentage of loggers who rated business health as “poor” or “very poor” more than doubled.
This has led to a downsizing in number of crews as a result of lower profitability and labor issues.
It’s important to remember that while loggers have sacrificed and worked through the pandemic, as did sawmill operations, those logging businesses experienced nothing even remotely like what sawmillers did with forest products price run-ups that enabled key investments and built up cash reserves.
And those hot building products markets have now been followed by inflation that’s affected every nook and cranny of business. Unable to recoup rising costs, for a logging company there’s little way to react outside of pulling back, changing direction or finding something else to do.
Labor is also a huge concern for loggers, and is a key to sustaining a healthy supply chain. Only 25% of those who responded say they are able to offer health care, which is huge if you want to build a stable payroll.
As one logger says:
“If the industry wants to attract new people, we have to be able to offer health care, and the money has to come from somewhere.”
This isn‘t to point fingers: Loggers’ health care and profitability issues aren’t the absolute responsibility of wood-consuming organizations, though much to their credit some manufacturers don’t shy away from it. But if certain supply chain viability issues aren’t resolved, such problems have a way of spreading.
Don’t receive Timber Processing magazine? Subscribe today!
Latest News
Canada Pleased With Softwood Lumber Agreement Extension
The agreement that ended many years of trade disputes over duties and other barriers to selling wood across the Canada-U.S. border was set to expire in 2013, but will be extended until 2015, and industry associations across Canada are pleased with the news. President...
B.C. Achieves Record Lumber Exports Goal
The province of British Columbia has set a new record that many believed to be unattainable. With lumber export sales of 4.28 billion board feet as of November, exports to China have already surpassed the province's 2008 goal of exporting four billion board feet in...
U.S., Canada Extend Softwood Lumber Agreement
A two-year extension to the 2006 Softwood Lumber Agreement (SLA) has been agreed upon, extending the program to October 2015 and granting stability to the volume softwood trade between the U.S. and Canada. The SLA was originally signed by the U.S. and Canadian...
Canal Wood Takes Hit For Timber Practices
Canal Wood, the nation’s largest privately held provider of wood fiber supply chain services, has paid the U.S. government $520,064 as settlement related to findings that Canal failed to report approximately 1,000 timber scale tickets on settlement sheets for timber...
Stimson Lumber Invests In Oregon Sawmill
Stimson Lumber Company recently invested $5.5 million for mechanical upgrades at its Tillamook, Ore. stud mill. An estimated 5%, or $275,000, was spent in Tillamook County on local contractors, helping to boost the local economy. Plant Manager Chris Stirk described...
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.