Timber iQ February - March 2019 // Issue: 42 | Page 8

NEWS Breeding trees for big buildings Commercially farmed trees offer a renewable, carbon neutral and versatile fibre for bio-innovation. Wood from commercially farmed trees offers renewability, carbon neutrality and versatility required for green innovation. T all timber buildings was just one of the topics deliberated on at the recent annual meeting of the International Council of Forest & Paper Associations (ICFPA) in Tokyo, Japan. Country representatives discussed global priorities around climate change, tree breeding research and the role of the sector in the bio-economy. With Tokyo as the host city, it would be remiss not to examine plans by Sumitomo Forestry to build a 350-metre high hybrid timber skyscraper to mark the company's 350th anniversary in 2041. Named W350, the ambitious 70-storey tower will be almost four times higher than the 18-storey Brock Commons Student Residence in Vancouver, Canada, which currently holds the record for the tallest timber building in the world. The skyscraper was designed by Sumitomo's Tsukuba Research Laboratory in collaboration with Tokyo practice Nikken Sekkei. It will be Japan's tallest building. The company says it will be a ‘wood and steel hybrid structure of the right materials in the right places’ with a timber to steel ratio of 9:1. It is expected that 185 000m 3 6 FEBRUARY / MARCH 2019 // of wood will be used in its construction. But where will it come from? “They will grow the trees,” remarks ICFPA president and executive director of the Paper Manufacturers Association of South Africa Jane Molony. “Tree breeding forms an integral part of the W350 project, and Sumitomo envisages a convergence of materials, biorefinery and tissue culture technologies.” GREEN SHOOTS OF INNOVATION "On the one hand, the sector has seen printing and writing grade production and consumption continue its downward trend with machines either closing or converting to more profitable grades,” explains Molony. “We have seen the death of some grades but now we witness the emergence of so much that is new, that is hopeful; green shoots are everywhere." Like the phoenix rising, Molony says that nanocellulose is being commercially produced in Japan. “We see investment in biofuel in Finland, xylitol being produced from waste www.timberiq.co.za