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Coastal British Columbia log exports : policy review and analysis Plavetic, Michael
Abstract
Log exports have been an important issue for the forest industry of coastal British Columbia, which is the source of a majority of the province’s log exports. They account for a relatively small proportion of the province’s annual harvest, normally less than 5%, yet garner a lot of attention from the government, industry and the public. British Columbia log export policies were first enacted in 1891. Policies were introduced to restrict log exports in order to promote the development of the domestic manufacturing industry. Surplus to domestic manufacturing has been the main criterion for receiving an export permit since the government introduced exemptions to the restrictions in 1901. Log export volumes tend to increase during recessionary times to stimulate economic activity in the forest industry and normally rise and fall inversely with the demand for manufactured wood products. In 1995 the largest importer of forest products from coastal British Columbia, Japan, went into recession. Following that, Japanese builders moved away from the use of hemlock lumber when new building codes were introduced there. This caused lumber exports to Japan to collapse and the price of hemlock, which makes up 60% of the inventory on the coast, to go down by almost half in three years. The coastal forest industry has been struggling since then. The volume of logs exported from the coast has increased dramatically from the lows of 1997 and many coastal mills have shutdown. This has brought a lot of attention to log export policy. A common perception is that log exports are akin to exporting manufacturing jobs. Log exports increase harvesting activity by giving companies access to markets that are willing to pay more for logs than domestic manufacturers can afford. Without access to export markets many stands would not be harvested because the domestic log price is below the cost of harvesting them. The logs that are not exported, which was 76% in 2010, are sold domestically. Exports essentially subsidize domestic log prices and generate harvesting activity that would not have occurred otherwise. All sectors of the forest industry benefit from fewer log export restrictions.
Item Metadata
Title |
Coastal British Columbia log exports : policy review and analysis
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Creator | |
Date Issued |
2013-04
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Description |
Log exports have been an important issue for the forest industry of coastal British Columbia, which is the source of a majority of the province’s log exports. They account for a relatively small proportion of the province’s annual harvest, normally less than 5%, yet garner a lot of attention from the government, industry and the public. British Columbia log export policies were first enacted in 1891. Policies were introduced to restrict log exports in order to promote the development of the domestic manufacturing industry. Surplus to domestic manufacturing has been the main criterion for receiving an export permit since the government introduced exemptions to the restrictions in 1901. Log export volumes tend to increase during recessionary times to stimulate economic activity in the forest industry and normally rise and fall inversely with the demand for manufactured wood products. In 1995 the largest importer of forest products from coastal British Columbia, Japan, went into recession. Following that, Japanese builders moved away from the use of hemlock lumber when new building codes were introduced there. This caused lumber exports to Japan to collapse and the price of hemlock, which makes up 60% of the inventory on the coast, to go down by almost half in three years. The coastal forest industry has been struggling since then. The volume of logs exported from the coast has increased dramatically from the lows of 1997 and many coastal mills have shutdown. This has brought a lot of attention to log export policy. A common perception is that log exports are akin to exporting manufacturing jobs. Log exports increase harvesting activity by giving companies access to markets that are willing to pay more for logs than domestic manufacturers can afford. Without access to export markets many stands would not be harvested because the domestic log price is below the cost of harvesting them. The logs that are not exported, which was 76% in 2010, are sold domestically. Exports essentially subsidize domestic log prices and generate harvesting activity that would not have occurred otherwise. All sectors of the forest industry benefit from fewer log export restrictions.
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Language |
eng
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Series | |
Date Available |
2013-11-13
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0075566
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URI | |
Affiliation | |
Campus | |
Peer Review Status |
Unreviewed
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Scholarly Level |
Undergraduate
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Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International