The desecration continues. Another 20 hectares, this time in the iconic Dial Range on Tasmania’s Central Coast has been earmarked for clear-felling by Sustainable Timber Tasmania STT later this year.
The projected yield will only be 5,100
tonnes. The age of the coupe is unknown but if its producing Cat 1 sawlogs it’s
likely to be at least 60 years old.
Which make the growth rate about four
tonnes per hectare per year. To get this into perspective, plantations grow four
to five times faster and produce superior woodchips.
Of the estimated harvest 3,700 tonnes
will go straight to the woodchipper, with the balance of 1,400 tonnes comprising
various categories of sawlogs and peeler logs for Ta Ann taking a more
circuitous route. At best 30 per cent may end up as a timber product with the rest resuming their journey to the chipper before deportation.
For every tonne that’s taken off
site, native forest operations usually leaves as much again on the forest floor.
This is what the estimated cash
profit & loss statement for the Dial Range coupe looks like:
Parameters |
|
Area of
coupe (hectares) |
20 |
Harvest
estimate (tonnes) |
5,100 |
Harvest
per ha (tonnes) |
255 |
Profit & loss statement $'000 |
|
Proceeds |
420 |
Harvest
& cartage |
255 |
Road
costs |
20 |
Replanting
costs |
30 |
Wages
& overheads |
127 |
Cash loss |
-12
|
Notes:
1. Proceeds based the prices (the high price scenario) in BluePrint Institute’s paper on alternate land use options for Tasmanian native forests https://www.blueprintinstitute.org.au/seeing_the_forest_for_the_trees
2. Harvest
and cartage costs $50 per tonne.
3. Road
costs $1,000 per hectare.
4. Replanting
$1,500 per hectare.
5. Wages
and overheads $25 per tonne.
The above follows
the pattern observed in STT financial statements. In 2022/23 STT produced cash
operating losses before roading costs which it still treats as capital outlays.
It’s what enables
STT to pretend it’s sustainable, by overlooking some costs when reporting a
profit outcome.
Overlooking
some costs when estimating future harvest proceeds is what enables STT to
include the value of native forest as an asset, when the incontrovertible
evidence is that native forest harvesting produces cash losses and hence STT should
record its native forests as a liability.
STT Chaiman
Rob de Fegely also happens to be a director of the State-owned Forestry Corporation of NSW (FC) which 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 for the simple reason that it won’t
yield future profits. The only trees recognised with value is FC’s much larger
softwood plantation estate. Tasmania continues to pretend to be the only
State with a sustainable native forest industry. How much longer will we keep
deluding ourselves?
Like an iceberg most of the losses from native forest
harvesting are underwater. The above water bit is the bogus profit figure. Below
the waterline are the cash losses as set
out above, all the unrecorded non-timber losses whenever a native forest is clear-felled
(environmental, water catchment, habitat loss etc,) and the loss of opportunities
that flow from leaving native forests in
situ.
As a forester it has always amused me that all of Australia's State forest agencies used different accounting methods, as if economics was some kind of an irrelevant game for the forest industry.
ReplyDeleteDo private forest growers have equal license to fudge their books like the public forest growers?
If the forest industry was real (which I know it has never been) everyone would be using the exact same accounting methods, and playing/competing on a level playing field. No such playing field exists which is one of the many reasons the forest industry is in crisis.
A nice concise exampled of the failed public native forestry Tasmania-style.
Thanks John.
Re: ... "A nice concise exampled of the failed public native forestry Tasmania-style."
ReplyDeleteMy comment: "Very sad reality, actually."
Trashed Islands, not just Tasmania, same reasons however.