Sunday 10 December 2023

Tasmania's forests: The current position

 

CHALLENGES FOR TASMANIAN PUBLIC FOREST MANAGEMENT: THE CURRENT POSITION

This paper was written for the Forest Economics Conference held at Mona from 28th to 30th November 2023.

 

CONTENTS

Background

Tasmania’s forests: A snapshot

Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT): An overview

Issues

Tragedy of the commons

STT: A business, a guardian, or a godfather

STT in transition

Current markets

Information asymmetry

Summary

Forestry facts

Less popular forestry facts

Challenges

 

Background

Tasmania’s forests: A snapshot

Tasmania’s native forests cover three million hectares, about 40 per cent of the State. Two thirds are publicly owned of which only 21 per cent is currently available for production. Almost as much again is designated as available for future harvesting should the necessary approvals be granted. Most native forest harvesting occurs on public land.  In 2022/23, 89 per cent of timber logged from native forests came from publicly owned forests, with the balance from private forests. Of the total, 25 per cent were sawlogs, peelers for Ta Ann[1] and peelers for export, with the balance of 75 per cent destined for woodchips and a small amount of fuelwood.  Of the sawlogs and peeler logs locally processed only 20 per cent ends up as finished product[2]. Half of the waste is sawdust whilst the balance is added to the woodchip pile. The following chart sets out the production (in quantity terms) in the 2022/23 year.[3]


                     


 

Apart from the 75 per cent of product which is destined to the woodchipper the other striking feature of the chart is the small amount of sawlogs sourced from private forests, and the continued reliance on publicly owned forests to source native timber for the industry.

The current plantation estate adds another 10 per cent, or about 272,000 hectares to the total forested area in Tasmania.

In 2022/23, in volume terms, plantations produced 80 per cent of total product from forests (52 per cent from hardwood plantations and 28 per cent from softwoods). The balance of 20 per cent was from native forests. [4]

 



         

 Almost all plantations were established  with public assistance either directly by STT[5] funded by grants, or indirectly via  tax concessions to private owners of managed investment schemes [6](MIS). STT still owns about 22,000 hectares of hardwood plantations.  The following chart gives more detail about the current ownership of the State’s plantation estate.[7]

 

                   

   

Of the private plantations on private land approximately 90,000 hectares are owned under the New/Forests/Forico[8] banner and about 19,000 by Reliance Forest Fibre[9] . The former were a mixture of Gunns’ MIS plantations and Gunns’ own plantations[10]. The latter were originally FEA’s[11] MIS plantations.

Private plantations on public land were sold by STT to help buttress its native forest activities which were running at a loss.  The sales were via forestry rights whereby ownership of the land remained in public hands, but the rights owner acquired the trees plus a right to conduct forestry operations for the term of the right.

The hardwood plantations on public land are a mixture of Gunns’ MIS plantations originally grown on STT/Crown land but transferred to STT following Gunns’ collapse, plus other plantations funded by Federal TFA and TCFA grants[12] funds to help STT transition to a plantation-based future. Reliance Forest Fibre bought the 30,000 hectares of hardwood plantations from STT via a forestry rights deal in 2017/18.[13] The private softwood plantations on public land are managed by New Forests on behalf of foreign pensions funds and other large investors[14].

It is a little difficult to compare returns from public native forests and private plantations based on published figures because the end product differs. In the case of say STT, the end product is a mill door delivered log, whereas for the private operators the end product may be exported woodchips or sawn softwood timber for the local market.

STT has chosen to disclose less information each year. In 2022/23 the sparsely available information doesn’t include the long-abandoned disclosure of mill door revenue for various timber types. There is no breakup of revenue between timber types, not even between plantations and native forests. There is fortunately a little information on the quantity side, the tonnes[15] and areas harvested. For both native forests and hardwood plantations the harvest yield was similar, at 230 tonnes per hectare for 2022/23.[16]

STT doesn’t disclose the ages of logged forests. If the plantation hardwoods were 15 years old that implies an annual growth rate of 15 tonnes per hectare. If the logged native forests are 60-year-old regrowth, that implies an annual growth rate of 4 tonnes per hectare.

STT’s revenue for 2022/23 works out to be $86 per tonne across all timber types.  It’s not clear from STT’s Annual Report but this is likely to be mostly on a mill door basis, but some, possibly the plantation  timber, could be on a stumpage basis,[17] implying the average mill door delivered price was probably around  $100 per tonne .The price for plantation hardwood logs was believed to have been close to $100 per tonne in  22/23 which doesn’t leave much scope for premium sawlogs to have fetched prices much above the average. Certainly, nowhere near the price needed to compensate for the much slower growth rates for native forests.

In summary, production from plantations far exceeds that from native forests, both in volume and value terms even though Tasmania has proportionally the largest native forest industry in the Federation. Hardwood plantations are currently experiencing a small decline, in annual value terms as the first harvest of MIS timber has peaked, and in terms of size as approximately 25 per cent of harvested areas aren’t replanted. Softwood plantations principally produce sawlogs for Timberlink P/L[18] and woodchips for Norske Skog paper mill[19]. Hardwood plantations produce mainly woodchips (for export) and peeler logs (for export).  The absence of all but a few sawlogs or peeler logs from private forests, both plantations and native forests, demonstrates there are still considerable challenges for the industry to prepare for the future.

 

Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT): An overview

STT is the Forest Manager appointed pursuant to the Forest Management Act 2013 (FMA) to look after Tasmania’s public native forests.

Section 8 sets out STT’s functions:

 

(a) to manage and control all permanent timber production zone land.

(b) to undertake forest operations on permanent timber production zone land for the purpose of selling forest products.

(c) such other functions as are approved in writing by the Minister and the Treasurer.

STT is the Forest Manager for the forest estate which in most instances is owned by the Crown. STT includes the forest estate which it manages in its financial statements. Essentially STT’s role is to undertake timber operations on designated land. It is not known whether shareholder Ministers have directed STT to pursue other functions pursuant to Section 8(c).

As we have seen 89 per cent of native forest production was from public forests, STT’s  2022/23 Annual Report provides a breakup for timber types in that year (in quantity terms)[20]:

                     

 

Production is largely driven by the statutory requirements of the FMA to supply a minimum quantity of high-quality sawlogs, by contracts with sawlog buyers and by long term contracts to supply peeler billets to Ta Ann.

STT’s primary function is to manage the forest estate for timber production. There is an almost universal recognition that native forests are crucial perpetual ecosystems, yet STT treats native forests as a timber source, not entirely surprising since that is its statutory role. Not only are non-timber values ignored when STT values its forest estate, the assessment of net proceeds from harvestable timber ignores the costs of regenerating native forests, which is difficult to understand given that a native forest is a perpetual ecosystem. This methodology allows STT to claim it is financially sustainable.

Apart for forest land and trees most of which it doesn’t legally own, STT is a shell company, with a few bits of property plant and equipment and working capital offset by payables and employee entitlements, the latter fortunately much lower since the government agreed to assume over 80 per cent of STT’s unfunded superannuation liability in 2017. STT no longer has any borrowings. It can’t service any debt. Whilst it continues to post headline profits [21] its cash earnings[22]  before government operating grants are always negative and made even worse by including the mandatory costs of regenerating felled forests. It wasn’t until 2022/23 that STT started expensing the costs of regeneration. Previously they were capitalised thereby overstating profits. If one also includes other cash outlays for minor plant, motor vehicles and roads which are still capitalised, the cash deficits from STT’s forest operations are even larger.

STT’s net equity of around $220 million comprises the value of the forest estate. A forest estate is valued on the basis of future net proceeds[23]. STT is only profitable if the value of its forest estate increases. Its equity position for all intents and purposes is the value of expected net future proceeds derived by cherry picking a few numbers whilst ignoring others.  Even though replanting costs are now expensed they are not included in estimates of future net proceeds. Nor are roading costs. If both are included it is likely the value of STT’s forest estate would be negative. Its equity position would become a negative number representing a provision for future losses.[24] [25]

The 2022/23 Annual Report gave a glimmer of what might be possible in the future. STT earned $299,000 worth of ACCUs.[26] It would be interesting to know if this relates to land legally owned by STT or whether it relates to Crown land which forms the bulk of STT’s forest estate. Not to recognise land as having any value but including income from abatement measures on that land would be a puzzling outcome.

Now that STT recognises land as having a value separate from trees, how should it be valued? Land which STT legally owns has been reintroduced into the financials at historical cost but how should the rest being Crown land which STT is required to manage be treated? With a zero value as per the 22/23 financials?  That doesn’t appear to be a prudent basis for sensible public policy.

As a corollary should a notional rent be included when determining future net market proceeds and hence the value of native forests on Crown land?  If one was valuing two similar coupes, one on leasehold land and one on freehold land, one would need to include a notional rent on the freehold land so a fair value for both crops was calculated.  Not having to earn a return from public land may be one reason public forests may have been overexploited. If notional rents were included when assessing future harvest proceeds and hence values, there is little doubt native forests would have a very large negative value. STT’s financial position would be clear for everyone to see, an entity with negative cash flows and negative equity needing a letter of comfort from the Treasurer to keep trading.

 

Issues

Tragedy of the commons

By claiming financial sustainability STT has diverted attention away from its commons dilemma[27] where a few individuals over-consume a resource at the expense of the broader community. STT role is to supervise our native forests and to derive the greatest value from them. Faced with a commons dilemma, STT refers to the flow on effects of its operations as a way of promoting the broader economic and social benefits of its operations. Whilst undoubtedly true, to some extent at least, this in no way helps mitigate a commons tragedy. The flow-on-benefits argument does not acknowledge there may be alternative uses for the resources. The externalities or spill over benefits have enormous benefit potential for Tasmanian communities. This is the nub of the native forests issue. There is a growing consensus that native forests need to be viewed, not merely a source for timber, but as a perpetual repository hosting a variety of non-timber values crucial for the common good. To ignore this at best is poor public policy, and at worst a tragedy we will all come to regret.

STT: A business, a guardian or a godfather?

STT operates in a grey area. Were it a government agency, national competition rules would require it to charge according to full cost attribution (FCA) rules laid down by OTTER, the Tasmanian Economic Regulator. As a GBE it needs to avoid competing with private businesses if it is propped up by its owner, the Tasmanian government. Operating as a GBE gives STT space to distance itself from public scrutiny. It is easier to invoke commercial in confidence.

STT’s job is a difficult one. Navigating its way past the commons obstacles, trying to free itself from government handouts whilst as a guardian of native forests risking being held captive by the industry it is supposed to supervise; it cannot be easy. Any resolve to reassess the role and function of native forests of native forest, must inevitably lead to a review of the role of STT as laid out in the Forest Management Act. What would optimal management of Tasmania’s forests look like? What is the most advantageous path forward?

STT is not just a timber seller. It guides and shapes the industry. Prior to receivership of Gunns in 2011, STT was the monopoly owner of a hugely valuable native forest estate. By allowing Gunns to over exploit the forests for inadequate returns Gunns became the dominant player in the Tasmanian forest industry. This meant its demise left a gaping hole.

While Gunns was insolvent, STT famously intervened and backed one of its highly geared clients with a history of losses despite government handouts, to attempt a purchase of the Triabunna wood chip mill. Treasury were scathing of the proposed deal. The effort failed, yet even today STT provides working capital to clients via repurchase deals.

There may be a sound argument to assist infant industries but as most economists will attest there’s a real danger infants will become senile adults still needing to be spoon fed. The expectation that STT exists to supply timber at prices that will allow the industry and all contractors who comprise the supply chain to be profitable, is endemic.

STT in transition?

STT is in constant transition. But to where exactly?

Twenty-five years ago, STT owned 50,000 hectares of softwood plantation and had the beginnings of a hardwood plantation estate following the receipt of Helsham grant funds. Since then, grants pursuant to the TFA and TCFA agreements were provided to allow STT to transition to a plantation-based hardwood operation. The first tranche of the softwood plantations was sold over 20 years ago because the then government needed funds to fix its own balance sheet. The rest of the softwoods plus the most of the TFA and TCFA funded plantation have since been sold to help STT survive. Most of the trees intended to help STT transition to a plantation-based future have all been sold well before maturity at considerable loss. With only about 22,000 hectares of hardwoods remaining, all approaching harvest time in the next 10 years or so, it would not surprise to see STT exit the plantation business, leaving the field wide open for a manager like New Forests to either take over or at least manage any future replanting.

Current markets

A quick look at the 4 main categories:

·        The native timber market is distorted by the over-arching behaviour of STT and its inaccurate valuation and accounting methods. It barely warrants the label market. It’s a clearing house for a few insiders who are privy to price and quantity information necessary for even the most rudimentary markets. Even the major  by product woodchips has been controlled by Artec a private monopoly which moved into the space vacated by Gunns, because national competition rules prevent STT from competing with private companies. Midway, an ASX listed company has recently expanded its operations in Tasmania and has done a deal with STT for the supply of thinnings from regrowth forests, believed to be 300,000 tonnes per annum.  The market is fraught and lacking transparency. As a result, only wealthy hobbyists, farmers and insiders will risk investing in a business where there is such a long time between outlay and reward, where market signals are muted and returns uncertain.

·        The softwood sawlog business is dominated by the vertically integrated operations of New Forests and its associated sawmill operations owned by Timberlink P/L. Smaller softwood sawmills were squeezed when New Forests bought both STT’s former softwood plantations and the processing facilities from Gunns’ Receivers. New Forests have also purchased softwood plantations used to supply Norske Skog. Long term investors contemplating establishing new softwood plantations would be understandably wary. It’s a limited market by any stretch.

·        Hardwood plantations for woodchips are almost exclusively the domain of New Forests/Forico and Reliance Forest Fibre which both have vertical integrated businesses from growing through to exporting. Add to this the trauma caused by failed MISs and potential growers will be reticent. More domestic end users rather than exporting is the only way to build a market necessary to attract new plantings by new participants. With existing operators backed by large superannuation funds looking for new opportunities, the entry barriers for new smaller players are real.

·        The development of a reliable functioning market for hardwood sawlogs and peeler logs from plantations received a huge setback when STT abandoned its attempts to lead the way, instead selling its government funded plantations so it could survive for a few more years, a decision no doubt in part caused by the need to satisfy the long-term supply contracts that underpin STT’s cash flow problems. The massive injections of taxpayer funds to develop hardwood plantations have ended up subsidising overseas pension funds and large investors.

Information asymmetry

At every turn, wherever one looks there is little evidence of functioning markets. Markets are supposed to be places where buyers and sellers, and potential buyers and sellers meet voluntarily to exchange information and possibly reach deals. Information about prices, growth rates, ages at harvest are conspicuously lacking. The lack of this information caused MISs to run much longer than they should have. It is difficult for outsiders to obtain the necessary information to make informed decisions. And even well-intentioned insiders can’t divulge data to outsiders because it’s commercial in confidence. This has been a pattern with the forest industry in Tasmania.

Information asymmetry is hindering  the management of a crucial resource, not just the timber resource on public lands but all the other more crucial non-timber values which constitute a forest eco-system.

 

Summary

Forest facts

·        Native forests are perpetual ecosystems yet are valued by STT on the basis that trees are a single rotation crop, where regeneration costs are ignored and most forest land is assumed to have a nil value,

·        Changes in the estimates of future net proceeds from a timber crop has a material impact on the determination of tree crop value which determines the profitability of native forest logging.

·        Harvesting is a cashing event. When forests are valued, changes are brought to account as income (or losses) each year. Harvesting is, or should be, a realisation of those previously recorded profits or losses.

·        Plantation hardwoods grow four to five times faster than native forest on similar sites. Prima facie that means native forest timber needs to fetch at least five times what plantation timber does to achieve a similar return.

·        STT has a composite role as a guardian and protector of native forests, as well as a business trying to make a sustainable profit and as the godfather of the forest industry.

·        Funds will always be needed to look after native forests regardless of whether logging occurs.

·        Harvestable native forest coupes are becoming more remote on less accessible sites leading to higher harvest and cartage costs.

·        Arisings such as woodchip and peeler logs shouldn’t be allowed to drive native forest operations as these can be produced much more efficiently from plantations.

Less popular forestry facts

·        Native forest logging as currently managed by STT is not financially sustainable. If the costs of regeneration were included when calculating future net proceeds native forests would have a negative value.

·        As a corollary, STT would have negative net equity, representing future contributions required by government to indirectly subsidise a non-market viable industry.

·        There is no way a native forest which grows at somewhere between one and four tonnes per hectare per year can ever be financially sustainable if only a tiny fraction ends up fetching premium sawlog prices.

·        Harvesting may generate cash at harvest time but that doesn’t make it profitable.

·        Only 20 per cent of timber harvested from all Tasmanian forests in 2022/23 came from native forests, almost all from public forests.

·        Twenty per cent is also a reasonable proxy figure for direct employment in the native forest industry as a proportion across the overall forest industry.

Challenges

·        To refocus on native forests as a perpetual ecosystem rather than as a mere source for timber. In particular to reinstate the primacy of land and all its associated values rather than it simply being treated as a growing medium for trees.

·        To determine what amount of human interaction is acceptable in a reimagined forest system.

·        To acknowledge and accept that it is possible for people from different perspectives with different paradigms to guide their thoughts, to reach the same conclusion via different routes.

 

Postscript

Nick O’Malley of The Age wrote a summary of the Congress Logging Tasmania: How Mona’s David Walsh, Kirsha Kaechele brought industry’s most powerful players together (theage.com.au).

The BluePrint Institute’s paper on alternate land use options for Tasmanian native forests can be found  Seeing the forest for the trees: Exploring alternate land use options for the native forests of Tasmania - Blueprint Institute

 

 



[1] Ta Ann Tasmania P/L is part of the public listed Ta Ann Group publicly headquartered in Sarawak, Malaysia. It was granted long term contracts for the supply of peeler logs from native regrowth forests. Veneer mills to process the timber were built in the Huon in 2007 and in Smithton in 2008. Originally the sliced veneer was shipped back to Sarawak for plywood manufacture but in 2015 a ply mill was built in Smithton, mostly funded by a government grant plus proceeds from the surrender of roughly half the peeler log quota which had been granted at a peppercorn price. The Huon mill closed following the Jan 2019 bushfires.

[2] Feedback from industry at the Congress was this figure is now closer to 30 per cent.

[3] From 2023 Annual Reports of Sustainable Timber Tasmania P/L and Private Forests Tasmania.

[4] ibid

[5] STT means Sustainable Timber Tasmania P/L, formerly called Forestry Tasmania P/L, a Tasmanian Government Business Enterprise (GBE).

[6] Managed Investment Schemes were pooled arrangements whereby investors paid tax deductible fees to a promoter to acquire a leasehold interest in a little as one third of a hectare of land to conduct a business of primary production by planting trees, usually but not exclusively hardwood trees with a short rotation intended for pulpwood. The upfront fees were a cash flow bonanza for promoters, which quickly led to over promotion to taxpayers keen to buy tax deductions, often with finance arranged by promoters. Hubris and greed, poor site selection, poor growth rates, all led to abysmally poor returns ensuring investors would quickly lose interest. Which they did along with 95 per cent of their initial outlays, sweetened only by tax deductions gained from payment of upfront fees. Following MIS excesses, a new Division 394 of the Tax Assessment Act 1997 was legislated. This has failed to excite investors and has been largely unused. Larger investors have preferred a New Forest model where funds are pooled to acquire and operate forestry businesses. Smaller investors, speculators and tax minimisers have gone elsewhere.

[7] From 2023 Annual Reports of Sustainable Timber Tasmania P/L and Private Forests Tasmania

[8] Comprised 10,000 hectares of softwoods and 80,000 hectares of hardwoods. In addition, 80,000 hectares of native forests were acquired which are held and managed for non-timber values, plus two woodchip mills, a tree nursery and port facilities. All assets were acquired from Gunns’ Receivers. New Forests manages plantation forestry projects on behalf of large investors, often large superannuation funds. In this case investors’ funds are pooled into the Tasmanian Forest Fund (TFF), consisting of two sub-trusts plus an operating company known as Forico Pty Ltd. For convenience’s sake the Group is known as Forico. TFF was established as a 10-year closed end fund. Early in October 2023, upon expiry of the first 10 years TFF was restructured into a perpetual fund with three owners with equal shares: UniSuper, an Australian superannuation fund, the Pension Protection Fund from the UK and APG Asset Management from the Netherlands.

[9] Reliance Forest Fibre is a Group which comprises Reliance Forest Fibre P/L and the Reliance Forest Fibre Trust. It is structured like Forico. Unlike Forico the ownership is murkier, with the last published accounts revealing the group’s ultimate owner is a company resident in the Cayman Islands.

[10] Gunns Ltd was an ASX listed company, originally a sawmiller of native forest timber, became a woodchipper of renown, a plantation grower, a MIS promoter, and a pulp mill aspirant. At one stage it was the largest timber business in the country with integrated operations in both softwoods and native forests. It collapsed in 2012.

[11] FEA or Forest Enterprises Australia P/L, a former ASX listed company. The first prominent Tasmanian MIS promoter it was overtaken by Gunns to end up as Tasmania’s second largest MIS company. It collapsed in 2010. Trying desperately to survive by belatedly developing an integrated business it built the Bell Bay sawmill before collapsing. This mill was then acquired by Gunns. After Gunns’ demise the mill was snapped up by Timberlink P/L and now appears to be an extremely profitable monopoly softwood sawmill operation in the New Forests’ stable.

[12] The TFA is the Tasmanian Forest Agreement, the TCFA is the Tasmanian Community Forests Agreement. The other two major Federal -State agreements to assist restructure of the Tasmanian forest industry have been the Helsham agreement following the 1987 Helsham inquiry plus the 2011 Tasmanian Forest Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA).

[13] This marked the beginning of Reliance’s operation. It subsequently purchased a wood chip mill at Bell Bay (from Smart fibre). Reliance then acquired the former FEA plantations plus some native forests managed for non-timber values from Resource Management in 2019/20. Reliance currently has a portfolio of 49,200 hectares of hardwood plantations plus 16,400 hectares of native forests so far spared from forest operations.

[14] ANZFF acquired the plantations in 2011/12. ANZFF, the Australia New Zealand Forest Fund, pools investors’ funds in a manner similar to TFF/Forico. New Forests manages ANZFF. ANZFF also owns Timberlink P/L, a softwood sawmiller.

[15] One tonne refers to one green metric tonne and is roughly equal to one cubic metre of timber.

[16] In the case of native forest harvesting, STT discloses areas of clearfell harvesting and areas of partial or selective harvesting. The latter are assumed to be 50 per cent clearfelled in volume terms to derive a clearfell equivalent area to enable a comparison with plantation operations.

[17] Trees are usually sold either on a stumpage or a mill door delivered basis. In the latter case the seller arranges and pays for harvest and cartage to a processing facility. In the former case the purchaser acquires standing timber and is responsible for harvesting and cartage.

[18] Timberlink P/L is owned by ANZFF the owner of the 50,000-hectare softwood plantation on public land. It acquired sawmill assets from Gunns’ Receiver in 2014 including the Bell Bay sawmill originally built by FEA, plus another large softwood sawmill in Tarpeena, South Australia. The was added to ANZFF’s existing softwood plantation assets acquired from Gunns when after shortly taking over listed company Auspine in 2008 mainly  by a share issue rather than cash, it  sold most of the assets at a considerable loss to raise cash to enable it to keep alive its ill-fated dream to build a pulp mill.

[19] Norske Skog is a Norwegian based paper company. Tasmanian operations are located at Boyer in the Derwent Valley. It manufactures newsprint and magazine grade paper.

[20] Sawlogs includes high quality sawlogs, Cat 2 & 8 sawlogs and logs for posts and poles. Peelers includes domestic and export logs. Special includes blackwood, huon pine, sassafras and other craftwood species. Woodchips also include the small amounts of firewood, bark and other residues.

[21] Headline profit means net profit after tax.

[22] Cash earnings means headline profits before interest tax and non- cash items like depreciation and in STT’s case movement in the value of its forests. Often called EBITDA (Earnings before interest tax depreciation and amortisation). It excludes capital outlays.

[23] STT’s 2022/23 Annual Report admitted to errors in the way it had valued its forest estate since 2010. From 2010 to 2022 STT valued its forest estate on the basis of future net harvest proceeds but then split that value between trees and roads. From 2015 what was described a make good asset, being the costs to regenerate/replant felled forests was also assigned part of the forest. Land was given a zero value. In 22/23 it was decided to attribute all of the value of the forest estate to trees and to value land and roads on an historical cost basis less any depreciation if applicable. The make good asset was removed and is now treated in the same manner as say a leave provision.

[24] A detailed analysis of STT’s valuation methodology can be found at Tasfintalk: STT's forest valuation charade, written before the release of the 2022/23 Annual report which outlined minor changes to valuation methods.. For details about the changes see Tasfintalk: STT admits accounting errors.

[25] The Forestry Corporation of NSW manages a hardwood estate of comparable size to STT with approximately 1.8 million hectares of multiple-use native forest and 34,000 hectares of hardwood plantations. Hardwood assets have been fully impaired, and the tree crop value is not recognised in the financial statements. Other related assets, except for land, are also fully impaired. The only trees recognised with value is FC’s much larger softwood plantation estate.

[26]Australian Carbon Credit Units issued by the Clean Energy Regulator for eligible greenhouse gas abatement measures. ACCUs are tradable assets.  

[27] Tragedy of the commons is an economic phenomenon popularised by a 1968 essay with that title by ecologist Garrett Hardin.


2 comments:

  1. Thanks John,
    Not quite as hard hitting as I would imagine, but this is Tasmania after all.
    One has to wonder why the MONA forestry congress is even necessary??
    The evidence is before us!
    The only thing lacking is human understanding and wisdom.

    Gordon

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Any progress on metro accounts?

      Delete