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Overview. Highlight the status of forest certification in Maine: emphasis on Family forestsIdentify the opportunities and challenges related to family forest ownersDiscuss how to advance the initiative to reach more family forest ownersCertification is a tool to maintain the strength and viabili
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1. Maine’sForest Certification Initiative
Blandin Foundation Conference
“Third Party Certification of Minnesota’s Family Forests: Getting it Done”
Grand Rapids, Minnesota
October 14, 2005
2. Overview Highlight the status of forest certification in Maine: emphasis on Family forests
Identify the opportunities and challenges related to family forest owners
Discuss how to advance the initiative to reach more family forest owners
Certification is a tool to maintain the strength and viability of Maine’s forest products industry….
….No more certification wars!
3. Certification demonstrates that forests: are well managed,
support healthy wildlife populations,
offer recreation opportunities and
are able to supply raw materials to support Maine’s economy now and for the future.
These are all “family forest” key messages!
4. Maine’s Position in Forest Certification Maine adopted certification standards early
ATFS (5%), FSC (5%), MLP, SFI (72%)
Joint certifications of SFI/ FSC @ (19%)
Standards are controversial
Each standard is considerably different from the others, affording the opportunity to select systems best suited to individual needs.
Origins from clearcutting referendumb
Maine is clearly in the lead
7.25 MM acres/ 41%/ ~60% of volume
Most certified forests are corporate-owned
Big challenge to increase participation by family forest owners Maine businesses have been early-adopters of all the major certification systems
All the major certification systems tested and applied their standards early on in Maine
Maine’s environmental community is engaged in forest certification
The State of Maine has strongly supported forest certification
Certification requires collaboration among landowners, foresters, loggers, sawmills, pulp and paper mills, log and pulpwood buyers and many others
Maine businesses have been early-adopters of all the major certification systems
All the major certification systems tested and applied their standards early on in Maine
Maine’s environmental community is engaged in forest certification
The State of Maine has strongly supported forest certification
Certification requires collaboration among landowners, foresters, loggers, sawmills, pulp and paper mills, log and pulpwood buyers and many others
5. Maine’s Certification Progress
6. Certification Principles Market-driven
Voluntary
Continual improvement
Value adding: environment, economy, community
Collaboration
Generally good alignment with family forest owners, but a low participation rate – why?
7. Family forest challenges Costs and benefits of certification
Connect demand to supply
Independent-minded forestland owners
Seeking recognition of good forestry (Tree Farm), not interested in the “discipline of documentation”
“Alphabet soup” syndrome
We need simpler messages, perhaps fewer systems?
House wiring example
Systems must address landowner concerns
Add value to landowners
Consumer demand/ market demand
Challenge to develop a “real economy” around certification Costs and benefits of certification
Decrease costs, increase benefits, attract market access and price premiums, develop incentives to bridge cost: benefit gap
Marketing and demand
Focus has been on supply; new emphasis on demand
Need to increase and solidify demand for certified products
Family forests
Cost: benefit issues most pronounced in this market
Small parcel size and high rate of landowner turnover
Conversion to other uses
Certification system credibility
Standards setting process
Transparency of process
Public summaries of results
Atmosphere of confusion: landowners may want to become certified, but they do NOT want to learn all the details of each standard!
Costs and benefits of certification
Decrease costs, increase benefits, attract market access and price premiums, develop incentives to bridge cost: benefit gap
Marketing and demand
Focus has been on supply; new emphasis on demand
Need to increase and solidify demand for certified products
Family forests
Cost: benefit issues most pronounced in this market
Small parcel size and high rate of landowner turnover
Conversion to other uses
Certification system credibility
Standards setting process
Transparency of process
Public summaries of results
Atmosphere of confusion: landowners may want to become certified, but they do NOT want to learn all the details of each standard!
8. Maine’s approach to family forests: Small Woodland Owner’s Association of Maine
35,000 acres under group Tree Farm certificate
Responsible Harvest Verification Program
Master Logger
Grown from 27 to 97 firms in 3 years
MFS Stewardship Pool: “Woods Wise” landowners
Considering best method of certifying this group
Certification Leadership Team
Public/ private partnership
This is a non-regulatory, market-based, voluntary, value adding, collaborative effort that – if done correctly – will advance the interests of all involved.
9. SWOAM Small Woodland Owner’s Association of Maine
Responsible Harvest Verification Program
“Point of Harvest” – certifies practices, not land
Silvicultural considerations through forester involvement
10/ 20 year cycle when landowner/ forester/ logger work together
Five components:
Harvest planning
Timber sale set-up
Timber sale administration
Timber sale close-out with recommendations for next treatments
Additional considerations: training, equipment investments, stewardship
10. RHVP (cont.) RHVP certificate to be held by forester and/ or logger
Focuses effort at time of greatest potential harm or good (time of harvest)
Doesn’t require ongoing commitment (time and money)
Lower cost than certification
Could work effectively even with high turnover in ownership
All of this remains in development and in conceptual phase; plenty of opportunity to shape final form
11. Master Logger Eight Major Goals
Document harvest planning
Protect water quality
Maintain soil productivity
Sustain forest ecosystems
Manage forest aesthetics
Ensure workplace safety
Demonstrate continuous improvement
Ensure business viability
12. Master Logger (cont.) Grown from 27 to 97 firms in 3 years
Chain of Custody
MLC is now certified for wood from FSC certified lands
Smart Logging
Controlled Wood, BMP’s, CoC
Certified Land Pool
Chicago Climate Exchange
Prospective pilot project to sequester carbon over longer rotations
13. Closing thoughts: Supply is not the issue: we have plenty of it!
Especially for family forests, benefits must be raised to par with costs
Need to simplify certification
We need more market-based demand
Market access, pricing differentials are OK
Need a value-adding, “real economy” for market demand to pull new supply
Ultimately, consumers will be writing the demand analysis: “willingness to pay?”
Certification still in “early days”
14. Maine’sForest Certification Initiative Henry Whittemore
Director – Governor’s Forest Certification Initiative
Maine Forest Service
22 State House Station
Augusta, Maine 04333
207-287-4992, desk
207-441-0680, mobile
207-287-8422, FAX
henry.whittemore@maine.gov