Category :
Article
article id 5295,
category
Article
J. E. de Steiguer,
J. P. Royer.
(1986).
Increasing forestry investments by means of public policy programs.
Silva Fennica
vol.
20
no.
4
article id 5295.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a27751
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In 1979, the Federal Research in the United States instituted a so-called ”tight money” policy which led to a decrease in the demand for stumpage. The decrease in demand brought about lower stumpage prices and, consequently, a waning interest in policies to stimulate NIPF production. The authors report on five recent studies on NIPF behaviour and raise concerns that increases in demand for housing may bring new pressure upon NIPF as a source of wood.
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Steiguer,
E-mail:
js@mm.unknown
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Royer,
E-mail:
jr@mm.unknown
article id 5292,
category
Article
Ryoichi Handa.
(1986).
On the principles of Japanese forest policy since 1950.
Silva Fennica
vol.
20
no.
4
article id 5292.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a27748
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In Japan many governmental projects have been promoted during 35 years since 1950, which were most active in the history of our forestry and wood industry. They were pushed forward for and by high economic growth. This article refers to the development of our forest policy and projects in those days. But as for the future of the forest economics, it is an urgent question to develop the comparative study between every nation’s experience. In order to contribute to this problem, the forest policy is divided into three fields and experiences are discussed.
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Handa,
E-mail:
rh@mm.unknown
article id 5291,
category
Article
David J. Brooks.
(1986).
Evaluating the regional and distributional impacts of forestry cost-share payments.
Silva Fennica
vol.
20
no.
4
article id 5291.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a27747
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Standard methods of welfare economics are used in a market simulating framework to evaluate policy measures designed to increase future timber supplies. Forest management cost-share programs are examined using this methodology. The differential regional impact of cost-share payments is considered, as is the distribution of these benefits between stumpage producers (owners of forest land) and stumpage consumers (producers of forest products). Previous estimates of the welfare gains that would result from a higher level of forest management cost-share payments in the southern United States are revised to account for the loss of public revenue resulting from lower future prices. A methodology for comparing alternative policy instruments is discussed, and a preliminary, qualitative comparison is made between the use of cost-share payments and alternative policy measures.
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Brooks,
E-mail:
db@mm.unknown
article id 5290,
category
Article
Veli-Pekka Järveläinen.
(1986).
Effects of forestry extension on the use of allowable cut in non-industrial private forests.
Silva Fennica
vol.
20
no.
4
article id 5290.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a27746
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An empirical analysis of the Finnish non-industrial private forest owners indicates that forestry extension has an effect on the supply of timber and the use of cutting potentials. This effect appears to be indirect rather than direct. The use of extension services is likely to increase the frequency of timber sales, which in turn, increases the use of the allowable cut via increased volume of actual cuttings. Forestry extension can also be considered as an intermediate variable through which certain background conditions and owner characteristics affect the use of cutting potential.
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Järveläinen,
E-mail:
vj@mm.unknown
article id 5250,
category
Article
P. A. Harou.
(1985).
Comparison of methodologies to evaluate aid programs to nonindustrial private forests.
Silva Fennica
vol.
19
no.
4
article id 5250.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a15429
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A methodology to evaluate forestry programs aimed at increasing timber supply from nonindustrial private forests is presented that aggregates the marginal social cost and marginal social benefit of a sample program participants and compares them in a benefit-cost efficiency ratio. The paper exposes a methodology followed to evaluate several forestry programs in Massachusetts, USA, and discusses its advantages and inconveniences compared to the other methodologies that have been used for the same purpose. The marginal analysis is based on detailed property and landowner behaviour surveys which are costly but represent a good standard to compare the performance of other approaches.
The PDF includes a summary in Finnish.
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Harou,
E-mail:
ph@mm.unknown
Category :
Article
article id 7679,
category
Article
Ville Ovaskainen.
(1992).
Forest taxation, timber supply, and economic efficiency.
Acta Forestalia Fennica
no.
233
article id 7679.
https://doi.org/10.14214/aff.7679
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The effects and relative efficiency of alternative forest taxes are analysed theoretically. The Fisherian two-period model of consumption, savings and timber harvesting is extended by incorporating the management intensity decision and deriving the concept of long-run timber supply. The effects of lump-sum (site productivity), realized income (yield) and ad valorem property taxes on short-run timber supply, management intensity, and long-run timber supply are established. As the core of the study, the alternative taxes are compared in order to determine the appropriate forest tax regime in terms of production efficiency. The efficiency criterion generally requires that the excess burden of taxation at any given tax revenue should be kept to a minimum. The study distinguishes between an initially undistorted economy and an economy with pre-existing distortions due to capital income taxation (interest charge deductions). When the effects on forest management decisions of forest and capital income taxes are considered as a whole, a neutral forest taxation is no longer efficient. The non-timber benefits of a forest are incorporated to examine the robustness of the tax results with respect to the objective function. Finally, forest tax issues specific to Finland are considered, and administrational and equity aspects are discussed.
The PDF includes a summary in Finnish.
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Ovaskainen,
E-mail:
vo@mm.unknown
Category :
Research article
article id 24011,
category
Research article
Alexander Kaulen,
Benjamin Engler,
Thomas Purfürst.
(2024).
Net carbon storage of supplied timber in highly mechanized timber harvest.
Silva Fennica
vol.
58
no.
4
article id 24011.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.24011
Highlights:
CO2 emissions from timber supply comprise only 1.5–5% of the CO2 stored in wood; Distance to the mill has the greatest influence on CO2 emissions; Successful application by combining a few variable parameters from forest machine data with constant parameters to create a net carbon storage of the supplied timber; Simple presentation of the net CO2 storage capacity of wood can influence policy positively.
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Highly mechanized timber harvesting and timber logistics emit CO2. In turn, the provided timber stores CO2 from the atmosphere as biogenic carbon. This basic assumption resulted in the calculation of net carbon storage of supplied timber. For this, we first developed a formula that represents the carbon content of freshly harvested timber. Coniferous wood contains about 734 kg CO2 m-3 and deciduous wood about 1000 CO2 m-3. Contrary to this, CO2 emissions from trucks, harvesters, and forwarders were calculated using the variable parameters for actual diesel consumption and the distance to the sawmill and constant parameters for the transport of the machine to the stand, lubricants, transport of operators, loading, and fabrication, supply, and maintenance. The method was tested on an actual harvest. The principal findings are that the method is practical, the net carbon storage of the supplied timber is reduced by 1.5% to 5% by harvesting and transport activities, and timber logistics is the largest contributor to emissions. The CO2 emissions for harvesters and forwarders are about 4 kg CO2 m-3, and for downstream timber logistics across all assortments and distances is 11 kg CO2 m-3. We conclude that the emissions are low, vis-a-vis the storage capacity. Emissions and a standardized calculation model are imperative. The model developed here for mapping the net carbon storage of roundwood highlights the climate protection performance of timber and contributes to optimizing climate-friendly timber supply chains.
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Kaulen,
KWF - Kuratorium für Waldarbeit und Forsttechnik e.V., Spremberger Straße 1, 64823 Groß-Umstadt, Germany; University of Freiburg, Chair of Forest Operations, Werthmannstr. 6, 79085 Freiburg, Germany
https://orcid.org/0009-0006-2633-8132
E-mail:
alexander.kaulen@kwf-online.de
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Engler,
University of Freiburg, Chair of Forest Operations, Werthmannstr. 6, 79085 Freiburg, Germany
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2104-8209
E-mail:
benjamin.engler@foresteng.uni-freiburg.de
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Purfürst,
University of Freiburg, Chair of Forest Operations, Werthmannstr. 6, 79085 Freiburg, Germany
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9661-0193
E-mail:
thomas.purfuerst@foresteng.uni-freiburg.de
article id 584,
category
Research article
Ralph Alig,
Darius Adams,
John Mills,
Richard Haynes,
Peter Ince,
Robert Moulton.
(2001).
Alternative projections of the impacts of private investment on southern forests: a comparison of two large-scale forest sector models of the United States.
Silva Fennica
vol.
35
no.
3
article id 584.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.584
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The TAMM/NAPAP/ATLAS/AREACHANGE (TNAA) system and the Forest and Agriculture Sector Optimization Model (FASOM) are two large-scale forestry sector modeling systems that have been employed to analyze the U.S. forest resource situation. The TNAA system of static, spatial equilibrium models has been applied to make 50-year projections of the U.S. forest sector for more than 20 years. Much of its input on forest management behavior and decisions about use of forestland derives from expert-based systems external to the TNAA system. FASOM, a spatial intertemporal optimization model, directly incorporates decisions on management investment and land use options relative to agricultural alternatives as endogenous model elements. The paper contrasts projections of private forest investment from the TNAA and FASOM models, focusing on the southern United States. Comparison of the TNAA base case and an investment-restricted scenario from FASOM, both of which reflect a continuation of recent behavioral tendencies by nonindustrial private owners, suggests that Southern private timberlands have considerable biological and economic potential for intensified forest management. Unrestricted FASOM projections confirm that added investment could lead to substantially larger timber harvest volumes and lower prices than those projected in the base/restricted cases. But even under the more intensive investment scenarios, naturally regenerated forests would cover three-quarters of the future private timberland base and hardwoods would continue to dominate the inventory structure.
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Alig,
USDA Forest Service, Forestry Sciences Lab, 3200 SW Jefferson Way, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
E-mail:
ralig@fs.fed.us
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Adams,
College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
E-mail:
da@nn.us
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Mills,
USDA Forest Service, Forestry Sciences Lab, 1221 SW Yamhill, Portland, Oregon 97205, USA
E-mail:
jm@nn.us
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Haynes,
USDA Forest Service, Forestry Sciences Lab, 1221 SW Yamhill, Portland, Oregon 97205, USA
E-mail:
rh@nn.us
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Ince,
USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Lab, Madison, Wisconsin 53705, USA
E-mail:
pi@nn.us
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Moulton,
USDA Forest Service (retired), Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, USA
E-mail:
rm@nn.us
Category :
Review article
article id 378,
category
Review article
Yaoqi Zhang,
Daowei Zhang,
John Schelhas.
(2005).
Small-scale non-industrial private forest ownership in the United States: rationale and implications for forest management.
Silva Fennica
vol.
39
no.
3
article id 378.
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.378
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The transaction cost approach is used to explain why small non-industrial private forest (NIPF) ownerships are increasing in the U.S. We argue that the number of small NIPF owners have increased because: 1) a significant amount of forestland is no longer used economically if primarily for timber production, but rather for non-timber forest products and environmental services (particularly where population density is high), 2) when a person makes frequent use of non-timber products and services, owning forestland is more efficient for them because it saves the transaction costs involved in getting them from the market, 3) forestland parcelization takes place when non-timber value increases faster than timber value, and 4) marginal value for non-timber product is diminishing much faster than that for timber production. The paper also discusses implications of the parcelization of NIPF ownerships on forest management.
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Zhang,
School of Forestry & Wildlife Sciences, Auburn University, AL 36849-5418, USA
E-mail:
yaoqi.zhang@auburn.edu
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Zhang,
School of Forestry & Wildlife Sciences, Auburn University, AL 36849-5418, USA
E-mail:
dz@nn.us
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Schelhas,
Southern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Tuskegee University, AL, USA
E-mail:
js@nn.us