Whanganui Chronicle

Log supply not the cause of timber shortage

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Forest organisati­ons have joined to reject statements that the current shortage of framing timber is caused by foresters selling logs to China and not leaving enough timber to be processed for sale in New Zealand.

The Wood Processors and Manufactur­ers Associatio­n’s Chief Executive, Jon Tanner says Chinese log buyers were going to what he called extraordin­ary lengths to buy up logs and he is blaming this for the short supply of sawn timber revealed this week when Carter Holt Harvey cut supply to some of its regular customers, ITM, Bunnings and

Mitre 10.

But the President of the Forest Owners Associatio­n, Phil Taylor, pointed to the two biggest wood processors in New Zealand, publicly both stating that the shortage is mostly caused by a covid emergence building boom.

Carter Holt Harvey issued a statement stating the shortage was short term and industry wide caused by a huge timber appetite as well as CHH’s difficulti­es with upgrading capacity at its Kawerau mill.

Red Stag Sawmill Chief Executive, Marty Verry says there is a worldwide building boom and New Zealand was no exception. He has said that it was good to have the wisdom of hindsight but no one was going to pick covid happening and its constructi­on aftermath.

Phil Taylor says the WPMA claim that the problem is log exports to China goes back to the drive to get the government to cross subsidise local production with exports, which was the aim of the Shane Jones’ Log Mongers’ Bill last year.

“The WPMA was wrong then and it’s unfortunat­ely wrong again now. Their colourful stories of Chinese buyers flying over forests to spot log supply from the air has nothing to do with this short-term problem.”

“The WPMA is using a completely unrelated framing timber shortage to try to get government support for intervenin­g against exports which is the type of move the entire primary sector completely rejected last year.”

The Farm Foresters Associatio­n President, Graham West says farm foresters are getting into the peak years of harvesting from their

1990s plantings and they don’t want the government to control or tax their long-awaited harvest as it appears the WPMA was wanting the government to do.

“The WPMA says it wants the government to make a level domestic and export playing field, but it is in fact demanding the complete opposite.”

“As well, the logs supplied for export, are generally not suitable to meet the house constructi­on grades here in New Zealand. There is not that much overlap.”

“I also have a real worry that the government will be distracted away from the bigger strategic issues of supporting the use of timber, just at a point when it’s now encouragin­g New Zealanders to use it for good sound environmen­tal reasons.”

“These mills buy nearly half of forest growers’ product. We need them to continue to operate, as do all New Zealanders.”

Phil Taylor President Forest Owners Associatio­n

027 487 6890

Graham West President Farm Forestry Associatio­n

027 441 0353

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