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Oregon Forestry Where in the World are we Going?. Community Leaders Tour Sept. 10, 2002 Astoria, OR by Hal Salwasser Dean, College of Forestry Oregon State University. Forest Sustainability First. Lose the forest, lose all the associated values. Water.
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Oregon Forestry Where in the World are we Going? Community Leaders Tour Sept. 10, 2002 Astoria, OR by Hal Salwasser Dean, College of Forestry Oregon State University
Forest Sustainability First Lose the forest, lose all the associated values
Water Forests are headwaters of the nation: 1/3 of land area; 2/3 of runoff; groundwater recharge; best water from any land use (SOER, USFS)
Wood -- our “greenest” resource Wood products use less energy and water Energy Water Steel and wood compared in construction of a 10’ x 100’ wall
Wood in global energy 70% of cooking, heating, industrial energy in developing countries
Non-timber forest products • Seeds, Berries, Fruits • Medicinals/herbals • Fungi • Florals • Fish and wildlife • Arts/crafts woods
Climate Forests store ~ 45% of the carbon in terrestrial ecosystems IPCC 2000
One condition of forests for many purposes? • Ecosystem services • Products • Cultural links • Uses • Risk reduction Or, many conditions depending on purpose?
Forests cover large areas of the world’s land World US CA OR WA ME
But not as much as they used to cover OR US World
People transform forests(and have for >10,000 years) • Agricultural/urban conversions • Water diversions, dams • Forest management • Livestock grazing • Recreation • Climate change
Annual Forest Trends 1990-2000 Non-tropics Tropics Global FAO 2001: country surveys + pan-tropical remote sensing
Less forest; more people; more demands • World forest decline: • - 20 to 30% since 1600 bp • - 2.4% since 1990 • Wood use up 40% since 1960: 1.5 bcm/yr • Wood use to rise < 66% by 2050: 2 - 2.5 bcm • Need for all forest benefits growing as well • Water • Biodiversity conservation • Carbon stores • Recreation, subsistence, cultural uses
Globalization of forest issues • ~ 25-30% of global industrial wood use crosses international boundary; affects local prices • US imports 30-35% of lumber used • Forest industries integrating globally • Carbon, wood, biodiversity are global issues • US choices impact world’s forests: • Import wood • Export jobs • Import unemployment • Export environmental effects • Import invasive species • Store carbon
To sustain or restore forest health, productivity, and diversity … We must manage growth And we must manage forests to sustain multiple values, meet the needs of people for forest resources and forest services
U.S. in a Global Context Source: USDA Forest Service 2002
Forests are diverse, will be managed for many different purposes
Sustainable Forestry is Broad • Sustainable forest management sustains forests first, then varies by forest type, goals/roles, ownership, location • It treats each forest differently; approach, vital signs depend on goals, capabilities: • Production Value (PVF) • Multiple Value (MVF) • Conservation Value (CVF) • Residential Value (RVF)
A. Production Value Forest Much of world’s wood will come from this forest use • Goal: Most efficient wood/fiber production • Challenges: • Increase wood yield: 2X to 5X over natural • Reduce environmental impact, footprint • Improve product quality • Produce high return on investment • Maintain social license to operate
B. Multi-Value Forest Most of the world’s accessible forest will be in integrated management • Goal: Meet various landowner objectives • Challenges: • Optimize joint production • Sustain desired diversity of environmental, economic, community conditions and results, i.e., risk, forest health, vitality, productivity • Produce multiple benefits at reasonable costs
C. Conservation Value Forest Parks, reserves, wilderness, special areas for natural, cultural values • Goal: Perpetuate native ecosystems, species, nature’s processes, cultural heritage • Challenges: • Manage people to reduce impacts • Manage forests to restore “naturalness” • Manage ecosystems to ameliorate invasive species, pollution, vulnerabilities • Align management actions, costs and benefits for sustainability
D. Residential Value Forest • Goals: • Connect people with forest resources • Pleasant neighborhoods • Resource conservation • Minimize sprawl • Safety to life and property, risk • Wildlife habitats
Global Forests 2000 2050 2000: • Industrial wood use = ~ 1.5 bcm • U.S. produces ~ 25%; uses ~33% • ~ 2 cm/ha/yr ave. yield from natural forests • ~ 3.9 bil ha: ~ 95% not planted; ~ 5% planted • ~ 10% “protected” in nature reserves Victor and Ausubel 2000; FAO 2001; WWF 2001
Global Forests 2000 2050 2050: • Industrial wood use = 2 – 2.5 bcm; + 33 to 66% • ~ 5 - 50 cm/ha/yr yield in planted forests • Production Value Forests < 10% of total; yields ~ 50 – 70% of industrial wood demand • Multi-Value Forests < 40%; yields rest of industrial wood demand, other uses/values • Conservation Value Forests for ~ 50% of world’s forests possible due to above strategies Victor and Ausubel 2000; FAO 2001; WWF 2001
Forest Plantations 2000 Source: FAO 2001
Plantations as % of Total Forest Source: FAO 2001
Natural Forests 2000 Source: FAO 2001
% of Global Reserved Forests Source: FAO 2001: IUCN Classes I-VI
% of Region’s Forests Reserved Source: FAO 2001: IUCN Classes I-VI
Roles for U.S. Forests?25% of global wood supply; ~20% of protected forests • Industrial forest: ~ 68 mil ac; ~ 9% • NIPF/Family forest: ~ 363 mil ac; ~ 48% • Other public forest: ~ 170 mil ac; ~ 23% • National Forest: ~ 147 mil ac; ~ 20% Answers depend on global forces, policy choices made in federal, state, tribal and private sectors and on individual behaviors (incl. risk attitude)
Roles for Oregon Forests?5% of national wood supply; ~33% in IUCN Class i-vi • Industrial forest roles: ~ 5.8 mil ac; ~ 21% • Family forest roles: ~ 4.6 mil ac; ~ 16% • State forest roles: ~ 0.9 mil ac; ~ 3% • Tribal & County forest roles: ~ 0.5 mil ac; ~ 2% • Federal forest roles: ~ 16 mil ac; ~ 57% Answers depend on global forces, policy choices made in federal, state, tribal and private sectors and on individual behaviors (incl. risk attitude)
Policy Challenges • Determine roles/policies for stands, units, ownerships re sustainability goals • Policies/incentives to blend, nest patterns for different roles at landscape scale • Balance risks, costs, benefits of options • Set targets for and track indicators of success by role and scale • Oregon Benchmarks • Sustainable Forest Management Indicators
Align Management to Purpose PVF MVF CVF * Industry Family Tribal State Federal *= inclusions of biotopes or special habitats will occur in these types
Landscape-scale Integration PVF SustainableForestManagement MVF RVF CVF
Shared Responsibilities • Forest managers: SFM, various goals • Producers: deliver quality, price, value • Marketers: full disclosure • Consumers: make wise choices • Teachers: be informed, tell full story • Scientists: R&D, inform policy choices • Governments: set policies, assure equity • Interest groups: honest advocacy • Social contracts: invest for future vitality
U.S. Forest Use Class by Owner 1997 Source: USDA FS 2001
Western Forest Use Class by Owner 1997 Source: USDA FS 2001
Eastern Forest Use Class by Owner 1997 Source: USDA FS 2001
Sustainable Forestry Goals • Sustain Forests First: keep forestlands in forest uses • Give forest sector incentives, knowledge, and tools to sharpen performance on goals, stay competitive • Lift yields, productivity, value • Reduce risks, improve environmental performance • Maintain social license for all forms of sustainable forest management
Is this a healthy forest?Is it sustainable? It all depends on purpose and context