Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Peak Canadian Wood?



So claims the International Wood Markets Group. According to the Vancouver Sun's reporting (via Mountain Pine Beetle):
A new report on the mountain pine beetle epidemic describes it as one of North America’s largest natural environmental disasters that will put an estimated 16 major sawmills out of business in B.C. and lead to long-term lumber shortages in the United States.

Canadian lumber production is not expected to recover for the remainder of the century, one of the report authors said Thursday.

“We sort of think lumber production has peaked forever, at least relative to our lifetimes and our children’s lifetimes.” said Russell Taylor, president of the International Wood Markets Group. The Vancouver-based consulting company is one of three consultants who prepared the report for lumber industry clients.

Interior sawmills are expected to start running out of good timber within three to five years according to the report.

Coupled with reductions in the Ontario and Quebec timber supplies, the pine beetle epidemic is expected to reduce Canada’s share of the U.S. lumber market by 50 per cent. Lumber prices are expected to soar.

However, lumber volumes in B.C. will never recover to the 2005 levels, when a booming U.S. housing industry fuelled expansion in this province, Taylor said. The report forecasts a long-term sawlog supply from the B.C. Interior that’s roughly equivalent to the volume harvested in 2009, a year full of market-driven sawmill closures that’s widely considered to be the worst year in memory for the forest industry. Lumber production will pick up this year and continue to rise until 2013. But by 2015, it will have peaked, and begin falling again as sawlog-quality pine becomes scarce.
That sounds like a formidable amount of economic impact, due to something that is likely to be, at least in part, a climate change consequence.  Unfortunately, as so often with these kinds of reports from private industry analysts, the report costs $1100, so we have no easy way to verify the analysis for ourselves and decide whether we agree or not.

What I did do, however, was go off to Statistics Canada, and paid my $6 to get two series from table 303-0009, for sawn lumber production both for Canada as a whole, and British Columbia in particular.  The data run from Jan 1946 through December 2009.


As you can see, BC is responsible for about half of Canadian lumber production.  The claim of the report is that those 2005/2006 peaks will not be reached again in the 21st century, on account of bark beetle damage.  For maps of the epidemic, see here.

Update:  At commenter DataMunger's suggestion, here is a graph of US housing starts for comparison, from 1968 on (borrowed from Calculated Risk):

3 comments:

  1. The effect of the beetle on future production, I can't speak to.

    But to understand that graph, you need to also include a look at US new home sales.

    In Ontario, we have trees galore and no beetle but the softwood industry is a fraction of what it was. Economics.

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  2. DM:

    Agreed (the last paragraph of the quote I included from the Vancouver Sun mentions this).

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  3. Despite clear cases of forest diebacks such as the one involving the bark beetle, there seems to be a trend of increased growth in forest biomass in many forest types, perhaps also driven by climate change. See my comment to the 3/17 post on forest diebacks. Also see a new report; McMahon, et al., Evidence for a recent increase in forest growth: http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/02/02/0912376107.abstract

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