2019 International Forest Industries Magazine December / January IFI Dec Jan 2019 Digital | Page 6
ISSUE 66
DECEMBER 2018 / JANUARY 2019
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Editor
Chris Cann
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Editorial Board
Dr Patrick Moore – Chairman and Chief
Scientist of Greenspirit (Canada)
Darren Oldham – Managing Director
Söderhamn Eriksson (UK)
Professor Piotr Paschalis-Jakubowicz –
Warsaw Agricultural University (Poland)
Mr Kim Carstensen
Director General
Forest Stewardship Council
Eduardo Morales
South American Forestry Consultant
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EDITOR’S COMMENT
Wood you be without us?
If it’s possible, the forestry sector has
become even more indispensable
T he December-January edition of the
magazine is probably my favourite for the
year, simply because it carries the Industry
Voice feature. electricity but they are getting bigger and
more efficient and there are already batteries
powering houses. It won’t be long before sky
scrapers are built with cells in the basement.
Each year, we reach out to some of the leading
suppliers in the sector and ask them a range
of questions designed to help us form a
view of how the market is behaving. It’s an
exceptionally instructive exercise. The metals for green energies, ironically,
come from mining. And, while it is difficult
to imagine a time when we can do without
mining, we are becoming better at recycling
and we are, where possible, substituting
metals out of civilised uses.
There is value throughout but in this year’s
responses one answer has stayed with me
long after reading: “The forestry industry
has been robust for several years now and
as it continues to offer more growth as the
world continues to grasp and warm to the
facts that it is an environmentally friendly and
renewable resource.”
This came from Tigercat’s International Sales
Manager, Gary Olsen, and I’m not sure if a
truer, more timely phrase has been uttered in
forestry this year.
Logging has traditionally suffered from a
double-edged sword: raw materials underpin
modern life but cutting down trees in the eyes
of many is a grubby way to make a living.
It’s a similar scenario to that faced by the
hydrocarbon and mining industries.
As the saying goes: Whatever it is you’re
looking at, it’s either been dug up or cut down.
But, more recently, forestry has differentiated
itself as a raw materials supplier of some
moral and environmental merit, while its
former contemporaries battle.
Hydrocarbon producers are in the most
trouble and they know it. We are in the midst
of an energy revolution. This threat has
been circling the industry for decades in the
form of renewables such as wind, solar and
hydropower but while there was no way to
store the energy produced during peak times
in nature’s cycles for dispersion at peak times
in the usage cycle, it has been toothless.
Lithium-ion batteries and increasingly
vanadium cells are providing storage
solutions for more efficient energy use. At the
moment, these batteries are largely confined
to cars, which still regularly top up with grid
4 International Forest Industries | DECEMBER 2018 / JANUARY 2019
One immediate example that comes to
mind is the uptake of wood for large scale
construction. Earlier in the year I wrote
about the record being challenged for the
world’s tallest timber building – a record
that continues to change hands as teams
from around the world outdo each other with
ingenuity and creative wood applications.
That skyscraper with a cell in the basement
may very well be made of wood.
Forests also play a part in the energy solution
and therefore supply a small nail in the
hydrocarbon coffin by contributing biomass
to the mix.
Yes, biomass is still a carbon-based fuel but
forests are also carbon sinks and they are
renewable. Biomass uses chips but it also
takes advantage of waste products. Both
these elements mean it gets a big tick from
society.
The world’s population is growing and, by
definition, so is consumption. But while other
traditional raw material suppliers face an
uphill battle, the forestry sector is encouraged
to broaden its wings.
There will be market share for just about
any product you can imagine up for grabs
as the world seeks to limit the extractive
industries. Forestry will expand and move into
that vacuum as fast as our professionals can
innovate and deliver new and better ways to
work with wood.
Enjoy
Chris Cann