A Framework for Tracking the State of the Forest Industry: Case Study of Georgia
Author(s) -
Tim Sydor,
Brooks C. Mendell,
Jacek P. Siry,
Rafael de la Torre,
Tom Harris,
Bob Izlar,
Amanda K. Hamsley
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
southern journal of applied forestry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1938-3754
pISSN - 0148-4419
DOI - 10.1093/sjaf/33.4.157
Subject(s) - stumpage , procurement , forest product , wood industry , product (mathematics) , investment (military) , forest inventory , business , forest industry , tracking (education) , supply and demand , natural resource economics , forestry , industrial organization , forest management , economics , geography , marketing , microeconomics , psychology , pedagogy , geometry , mathematics , politics , political science , law
This research introduces a framework for tracking the state of the forest industry and relative competitiveness at the local level and applies it to the state of Georgia. Key insights highlight how localized forestry and forest industry profiles indicate where wood demand and suppliesare in and out of balance on an annual basis. Alternately, localized profiles that emphasize physiographic regions may not correspond well with traditional wood procurement areas. More importantly, ongoing tracking of wood supply viability and competitive analysis must distinguish between timber markets (stumpage, forest inventories and removals, and growth) and end product commodity markets (lumber, pulp, oriented strand board, and plywood). Mills, like forests, are not uniformly distributed throughout a state, whether measured by size, type, or end product. Tracking the forest industry in a localized, annual manner can support ongoing planning, investment, and policymaking activities in a targeted and efficient manner.
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