Increased competition for
small-diameter logs in the four states of the US Pacific Northwest
has resulted in a higher share of logs being consumed by sawmills,
thus leaving many pulpmills with low log inventory levels going into
the 4Q/17, reports the North American Wood Fiber Review.
Overshadowed by BC's unprecedented wildfire season, the US states of
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana also experienced a
significant and disruptive wildfire year.
By early September, almost two million acres of forest and rangeland
had burned in the US Northwest. Harvest operations across the four
states have been hampered by restrictions on operating hours,
disruptions in transportation, and loggers diverted to fighting
wildfires. In Montana, several sawmills had to close operations
intermittently in the 3Q/17 due to the proximity of wildfires. Full
harvest operations resumed after late September rains, though
whether there was sufficient time to replenish sawlog and pulplog
inventories before winter conditions set in remains the key question
for many log procurement managers this fall.
Unlike BC and its large provincially-owned commercial timber base,
the loss of burnt timber on US federal forests has had little impact
on the availability of timber with the exception being Montana,
where regular timber sales from federal lands have proven crucial to
selected sawmills. In general, however, the US Forest Service timber
sale program provides minimal sawlog or pulplog volumes to the
forest industry in Western US.
With lower harvest levels in the Northwest due to wildfire-risk
constraints, local sawmills expanded their procurement into
small-diameter chip-n-saw grades and higher quality pulplogs that
typically would be used by the region's pulpmills. This less
valuable log source, resulting in lower lumber yields, has still
been profitable for many sawmills thanks to the high prices for
softwood lumber during 2017.
The increased competition for small-diameter logs has resulted in a
dwindling supply of traditional pulplogs normally available for
pulpmills and independent chipping operators, with pulplog
inventories in August reaching their lowest level since the 2Q/14.
The low level of pulplogs in the region's pulp industry this late in
the season is a major concern among wood fiber managers in the US
Northwest as they seek to build adequate inventory levels of logs
for the winter season when residual chip supply from the lumber
industry typically declines.
Source: Wood Resources International LLC