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- From: dhepner@cup.hp.com (Dan Hepner)
- Subject: Re: Questions about old growth timber
- Sender: news@cupnews0.cup.hp.com
- Message-ID: <Bx9F6C.AHs@cup.hp.com>
- Date: Thu, 5 Nov 1992 20:20:35 GMT
- References: <41227@fibercom.COM>
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard
- X-Newsreader: Tin 1.1scd1 PL4
- Lines: 66
-
- From: mack@frugal.fibercom.com (Richard Mack)
-
- >>As a concrete example of the above, consider that the largest owner of fine
- >>grained large dimension softwood lumber in the world is the US government.
- >
- >Isn't this because sources in the private domain have been depleted?
-
- Yes, coupled with the elimination of old growth logging of late.
-
- >>considerably. Yet the optimal strategy for the mills is still to move as
- >>much through as possible, since they buy it for ~$0.3 per board foot, and are
- >>selling the finished products for ~$50+ per board foot.
-
- We'll note that this was corrected to $5/board foot, which I recently
- confirmed at the local lumber yard. Special pieces go as high as
- $10. Bid prices (a slippery number) tend to run over $1 / bd foot for
- the entire tree in areas with many trees which can make this kind of
- lumber. (note that this makes a _lot_ of large Douglas firs worth $1,000
- standing in the forest, and many of them worth $10,000).
-
- It's not the case that a mill in general is who makes most, or even a lot
- of profit. Everyone in the chain tries to make a profit. Loggers
- sell to mills. Mills sell to retailers. The mill itself is a single link.
- They buy logs delivered to their door, cut them into boards, and sell
- the boards out the other door. Now some mills are part of larger
- operations which buy trees and deliver logs, as well as take the
- boards and produce higher value products. Some are even involved
- in retail.
-
- >Just what is the old growth timber used for? Are there any substitutes?
-
- It is used for high strength, but especially high beauty beams and other
- dimensional lumber. Some assert that glass makes a suitable substitute
- for diamonds when used in jewelry; others disagree. Interestingly,
- 40 years ago one could not sell lumber at all which did not meet this
- quality; we've come to accept inferior lumber as acceptable.
-
- >What steps are being taken to ensure that only those uses that require
- >fine grained softwoods are being met with public timber.
-
- A 4 by 6 beam has two board feet per linear foot. That's about $10/linear
- foot. Few choose to waste.
-
- >Finally, why are large amounts of timber being exported in the raw
- >state rather than as sawn lumber?
-
- Because people in this country have been allowed to own logs, and sell
- them to whomever is willing to pay the most. Some of those people
- willing to pay the most prefer to take them home to saw them up rather
- than do so here.
-
- Note that the US government has not sold logs to export for a long
- time. More recently, the State of Washington stopped exporting logs,
- absorbing the expense of that decision in their education budget.
- (Controversy has arisen over companies who own logs they sell for
- export while simultaneously buying logs from the US government).
-
- >It would seem to me that if mill jobs are the issue, then such exports
- >should be restricted.
- >Dick
-
- I don't know what FiberCom sells, but it could be that if someone told
- you that they had good reasons why you should be restricted from selling
- it to foreigners, you would disagree.
-
- Dan Hepner
-