By Matthew Pelkki
Even if you leave out the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, the year 2020 was a busy one for Timber related news, both good and bad.
In the Arkansas forest products industries, industry expansions and investments included the Green Bay Packaging’s Morrilton facility’s virgin fiber project. After closing one paper facility in Crossett in 2019, Georgia-Pacific announced a 37-million-dollar investment in Crossett’s remaining paper mill. Koppers, a wood treatment company, expanded its Little Rock operations. Resolute Forest Products acquired mills in El Dorado and Glenwood with plans to upgrade and expand each.
StucturLam announced a new cross-laminated timber facility in Conway, with a commitment from Wal-Mart to build a CLT corporate headquarters in Bentonville. On the downside, Domtar announced their last paper machine’s closure in its Ashdown facility, though it will continue to make fiber. And the huge Sun Paper project in Clark County was canceled – the loss of a 1.5-billion-dollar investment for the state.
The opportunities for forest carbon and bioenergy markets appear good for Arkansas. Highland Pellets is upgrading its Pine Bluff facility and has plans to build in Union County. Exports are primarily to the European Union, but Asian markets are poised to grow substantially. 76 percent of the U.S. capacity for wood pellet construction is located in the southeast region.
As energy producers turn to wood pellets to reduce their carbon emissions, forest landowners are seeing the creation of more carbon markets where carbon-emitting industries are paying landowners for sequestering carbon in growing trees. The Family Forest Carbon Program is a joint venture by The Nature Conservancy and the American Forests Foundation to bring carbon markets to family forest landowners who typically own timber in relatively small parcels.
Cooperation is the name of the game for federal, state, and private forests in 2020. Initiatives include the Rural Forest Markets Act, designed to help family forest landowners buy and sell carbon credits and create other environmental revenue streams for clean water and biodiversity protection.
The Good Neighbor Authority is a cooperative program of the US Forest Service that allows the Arkansas Forestry Division to perform forest management activities on federal lands.
The Joint Chief’s Restoration Program and the Ozark and Ouachita Highlands Projects are conducting forest restoration programs on federal and private lands by using local cooperators, including commercial logging, to accomplish ecosystem restoration goals.
Other notable federal initiatives include the final rulings on the Waters of the United States that curtailed federal regulatory jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act. Additional changes were the inclusion of forestry workers as critical workers in the US economy, the relaxation of H2-B visa restrictions for forestry workers, and the Trillion Trees Initiative.
Some 345,000 family forest landowners own nearly 11 million acres of the 19 million acres of Arkansas forests. The primary concerns of these landowners are access to markets and invasive species.
Hardwood timber markets were significantly affected by China’s trade war, and the pandemic has worsened the situation. Family forest landowners also have trouble accessing markets because of the abundance of timber and excess production of timber throughout the state and the US South.
There simply is not enough production of timber products, and stumpage prices are lower than they were 25 years ago.
Re-opening global markets to Asia, investment in new lumber products such as mass timber construction and wood-bioenergy is needed to support good forest management by family forest landowners.
These landowners face some serious forest health threats by invasive species. Most notable in Arkansas are feral hogs and the emerald ash borer. Feral hogs are very destructive to native wildlife and even reduce water quality by destroying vegetation near streams and ponds. The Emerald ash borer is an exotic beetle that will likely kill vast amounts of white and green ash, important timber species in Arkansas.
Finally, the COVID-19 pandemic has caused major upheavals in the economy in 2020. During the early spring, the pandemic resulting in a historic loss of employment. The demand for many vital wood products such as tissues, disinfectant wipes, masks, and filters was extremely high, but the pulp and paper industry structure could not catch up with the demand for several months. Simultaneously, the housing market declined precipitously, but home remodeling and residential consumption of wood spiked upward.
Then, as the pandemic’s first wave subsided in the summer, and with interest rates cut to bolster the economy, the housing market rebounded strongly, causing price spikes in lumber and plywood costs. Like the paper industry, lumber production cannot increase quickly to demand, and the industry has been very hesitant to add capacity, anticipating the second wave of the pandemic this fall and winter.