Wood ID Lab Moves To Oregon State
Thanks to a five-year, $4 million federal grant from the Forest Service International Programs Office, the Wood Identification and Screening Center (WISC) is moving to Oregon State University, where it will join the College of Forestry. The WISC was established three years ago to combat the illegal timber trade by using wood samples and their unique chemical signatures to identify the origin and species of wood in lumber, furniture and even musical instruments. According to WISC Director Beth Lebow, illegal logging is the third most profitable transnational crime and costs the U.S. timber industry up to $1 billion annually. According to the World Economic Forum, half of all tropical deforestation is illegal.
Companies in the U.S. are banned under the federal Lacey Act from buying or selling illegally sourced timber products, and the WISC can help companies comply with the act and validate their supply chains in the future. When a wood product is imported, the importer has to submit a Lacey Act declaration that states the genus and species, as well as the origin of the wood. The WISC also works with other government agencies including Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection and the USDA Animal Plant Health Inspection System.
The WISC lab uses specialized mass spectrometry to analyze the chemical signatures in toothpick-sized wood samples no larger than a toothpick. Cross-referencing the signature with others in its database, WISC can determine a product’s genus and species within seconds. To date, WISC has collected 16,000 chemical signatures from 1,100 wood species.
Latest News
Canfor Q4 Profit Rises On Lumber Price Gains
Canadian forest products company Canfor Corp. posted a higher fourth-quarter profit on Wednesday,...
U.S. Hardwood Lumber Markets Continue To Build Momentum
The Weekly Hardwood Review Leading Hardwood Demand Indicator (LHDI)—a forecast of future demand...
Idaho Forest Group Upgrading Sawmill Equipment
Idaho Forest Group is installing new equipment at its sawmill in Nez Perce County that will double...
WorkSafeBC Revises Rules, Cracks Down On Sawmills
B.C. forest companies face new, prescriptive regulations that define how much sawdust can settle...
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.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.