Chapter 5 Plantations
5.1
As discussed in Chapter 2, the National Forest Policy Statement of 1992
included the objective of expanding Australia’s plantation estate, an objective
this Committee supports. The principle mechanism created to encourage the
establishment of more plantations was the Vision 2020 initiative.
5.2
As also discussed in Chapter 2, the land area of plantations in
Australia has roughly doubled since 1997, when Vision 2020 was launched.
Most of this plantation expansion has been in hardwood plantings. For a graphic
representation of the expansion of the plantation estate – from 1950 to 2010 –
see Figure 5.1, below.
5.3
The term ‘plantation’ is generally understood – in the community – to
refer to large plantings of a particular kind of tree (often exotic). In the
1992 Statement, plantations were defined as ‘intensively managed stands of
trees of either native of exotic species, created by the regular placement of
seedlings or seed.’[1] However, this definition
is misleading, because it suggests that plantations are composed of a single
species.
5.4
In fact, plantations can be planted with a mix of different species, in
a variety of planting arrangements and patterns. Whilst many concerns about
plantations relate to monocultural plantations – those planted with one species
only – considerable research and investment has gone into developing mixed
plantations, and the Committee is keen to see these kinds of plantations expand
in the future.
5.5
This Chapter will consider a number of issues relating to plantations,
including:
- land and water competition;
- planting, including rotation length and sustainability, and finance and investment;
- management, including the use of thinning, impacts on the local environment and impacts on the local community; and
- products and innovation.
Figure 5.1 Phases of plantation development in Australia
since 1950
Source Submission
59, Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, p.12.
Land and water competition
5.6
The terms of reference for the inquiry include the ‘impacts of
plantations upon land and water availability for agriculture’. The Committee
received considerable evidence about the impact that plantations can have on
their local area and region, and the Committee is keen to share its findings.
Land competition
5.7
The plantation estate has expanded considerably in the past two decades,
and this has seen the transformation of land area from agricultural to forestry
uses. As noted by Dr Jackie Schirmer, this has fuelled two major concerns in
the agricultural sector: first, that it reduces the amount of land available
for agricultural use; and second, that it drives up the price of agricultural
land.[2]
5.8
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry cites research by
Jacki Schirmer that showed
rapid plantation expansion in some regions and over some
periods has contributed to land price increases. Land prices have also
increased rapidly in other areas. [In addition] National Plantation Inventory
data show that the rate of plantation expansion in the late 1990s and early
2000s was exceptionally high.[3]
5.9
Timber Queensland states that
Recent expansion of the plantation estate in some regions has
caused friction with other traditional industries and resulted in generally
poor community acceptance of plantations. These conflicts have been
particularly prevalent in north Queensland, where plantations have been
established on former cane land.[4]
5.10
Councillor Ian Howard, from the Meander Valley Council (Tasmania)
submitted that plantations must be considered on a regional basis, to ensure
that other land uses in the region are still viable:
Timber plantations should not be defined as agriculture and
should not be competing with food crops for access to agricultural land of any
class without some mechanism to control plantation densities within a region.
Too many plantations in a region can make traditional and essential agriculture
unviable within that region.[5]
Plantations can be integrated into farm
operations, and can be a form of farm forestry. Plantations can be integrated
into a range of different land uses, and trees can play an important role in
many different ways in land management. The role of trees in land management is
discussed further in the next chapter, on farm forestry.
5.11
As noted by many submissions, the impact of plantations on land
competition – both the availability and price of land – is mixed, and not as
great as some in the community have claimed. For example, A3P suggests that the
impact of plantation expansion is only one of many factors increasing the cost
of land. Other factors include:
low interest rates, high commodity prices, strong
international demand for Australian farm products, rationalisation in the rural
sector with farm amalgamations, competition for farms from overseas buyers, and
multiple changes in land use.
The changes in land use include
plantations, as well as:
broadacre cropping (a major land-use change); dairying and
beef cattle expansion; intensive agriculture; farm consolidation; rural
subdivision and lifestyle farms (especially in popular ‘sea-change’ and ‘tree
change’ regions); and urban encroachment.[6]
5.12
The Forest Industries Association of Tasmania submitted that ‘plantations
do not compete significantly for prime agricultural land with other agricultural
users in Tasmania. The free market effectively determines the allocation of
land between agriculture and plantations.’[7] As FIAT continued, the
per-hectare price of prime agricultural land in Tasmania precluded plantation
expansion on such land.
5.13
Professor Jerry Vanclay suggested that the expansion of cities represents
greater land competition:
There is greater land use competition (and longer-term
implications) between urban development and agriculture than there is between
forestry and agriculture, so the forestry-agriculture competition should be
kept in perspective.[8]
5.14
Australian Forest Growers note that the total area of plantations is
very small – less than one percent of total land area. By contrast, AFG quotes
figures showing that ‘61% of Australia’s total land area...is occupied by
grazing and cropping.’[9]
5.15
Numerous submissions to the inquiry have suggested that the market be
left to allocate land to the highest-value use. The Institute of Foresters of
Australia advocates ‘a free market as the best mechanism for determining land
use. Landowners should be free to use and trade their land as they judge best
unless there are compelling reasons for community intervention’.[10]
Professor Jerry Vanclay suggests that ‘Ideally, if market distortions can be
avoided, agriculture-forestry issues should be resolved by the marketplace by
economics of crop yields, rather than by legislation.’[11]
According to the Forest Industries Association of Tasmania, the market already
performs its role efficiently in Tasmania.[12]
5.16
The Committee has found that plantations can make a local impact on land
competition, but at a regional or national level, their impact has been
overestimated. It supports the principle that the market be used to allocate
land to the highest-value use.
Water competition
5.17
Whilst the expansion of plantations has, in some places, increased
competition for land, plantations can also compete for water. As noted by the
CSIRO, ‘water availability is the most important limiting factor to plantation
productivity across most of the plantation estate.’[13]
According to Australian Forest Growers, plantations in Australia are ‘generally
a non‐irrigated
crop.’[14]
5.18
Some evidence to the Committee told of community disquiet about the
extent to which plantations remove water from the local environment. As noted
by Professor Peter Kanowski and colleagues, both competition for water and
social conflict over ‘plantation expansion militate against [international]
investment’ in plantations.[15]
5.19
As for the actual impact of plantations on the local water resource, the
submission from the CSIRO describes a complex situation. Whilst plantations use
more water than crops or grassland, ‘the impacts of plantations on water
security and availability had been overstated and the importance of the much
larger area of natural forests on water availability for urban catchments needs
to be emphasised.’[16] Further, the water
impact is likely to be local rather than regional. The submission also notes
that:
plantations accessing groundwater may use water more
efficiently...that is they produce more timber per unit of water than
plantations without access to groundwater. This suggests that careful siting of
plantations in the landscape can maximise timber production while minimising
impacts on catchment water yield.[17]
5.20
As noted by Private Forests Tasmania, the concern about the water use of
plantations is ‘made worse by considerable periods of drought’.’[18]
Timber Communities Australia considers that ‘the potential competition between
the forestry and agriculture sectors, particularly for water, has been
exaggerated by some commentators and that both sectors complement rather than
compete with each other.’[19]
5.21
The evidence presented to the Committee suggests that the water impact
of plantations is primarily at the local level. In addition, it is clear that
good planning, planting and management can ensure that plantations can be
sensitively integrated into the local water management regime. One submission
to the inquiry suggested that ‘it should be a mandatory requirement that all
future plantation developments be accompanied by a water management plan and a
water audit of the area.’[20]
5.22
Professor Peter Kanowski and colleagues have noted that there is a need
for better understanding of ‘the complex relations between forests and water
yield, and associated risk factors such as fire.’[21]
Further discussion of plantations and water is under the heading ‘environmental
impact of plantations’, below.
Committee Comment
5.23
The Committee is well aware that there is concern in some rural and
regional parts of Australia – particularly in regional and rural areas – about
the impact of plantation expansion on land and water competition. As noted
above, both the actual competition and the associated community disquiet have
the potential to constrain the further expansion of plantation forestry in
Australia.
5.24
As for land competition, the Committee considers that the expansion of
plantations has certainly increased land competition in some local areas of
Australia. However, at a regional and national level, the impact is negligible.
As noted above, the amount of land currently under tree plantation is miniscule
compared to that in native forest or agriculture. The Committee is aware that
there are many other pressures on agricultural land, and blaming plantations
alone for the entirety of land competition is unreasonable.
5.25
In regard to water competition, the Committee has found that plantations
might have a local impact, but regionally and nationally their impact is very
low. In addition, plantations have a complex and dynamic impact on water
resources, and can actually play a significant role in improving the quality and
management of water resources if planned well.
5.26
Land planning and water allocation are primarily dealt with by state and
local governments. The role of the Australian Government is limited, and the
Committee believes that land and water competition can and should be resolved
at a local and regional level.
5.27
As put by Professor Gordon Duff:
[We] have a natural advantage in Australia for growing
trees; we do. It is something we are good at, we have expertise and we have the
infrastructure. We have the land [based] issues to do with competition for
water and space aside. We have got the know-how to resolve those issues. It
gives us the security going forward. It is [playing] to a natural advantage.
There are those multiple benefits from managing and growing forests beyond just
wood production, which include carbon sequestration, energy resources and
dealing with other land management issues like salinity.[22]
5.28
The Committee believes that the further expansion of the plantation
estate can be achieved with the agreement and support of local communities.
Plantations make a contribution to local economies, and can assist the
treatment of local environmental problems. The industry should ensure that it
engages flexibly and constructively with local communities to ensure that it
adequately addresses community concerns and builds local support. The ‘good
neighbour charter’ in Tasmania is a good example of finding agreement between
agriculture and forestry,[23] and a similar approach
could be used elsewhere to deal with issues like water and land competition. It
is an example of the forestry industry ensuring its own future, by building its
social licence at a local level. (Social licence is further discussed in
Chapter 8).
Planting
5.29
As discussed in Chapter 2, there was a massive expansion in Australian
plantations during the 1960s, and a second big expansion in the past two
decades. More plantations should be established over the coming years, as this
will support economic growth and ensure the long-term viability of the forestry
industry. However, there are certainly some challenges to overcome in order to
achieve this. These challenges – and possible solutions – will be discussed as
follows:
- rotation length;
- finance and investment; and
- Managed Investment Schemes.
As discussed in
Chapter 3, there is also a potential role for the Carbon Farming Initiative to
support plantation expansion in the future.
Rotation length and sustainability
5.30
The period for which a tree is grown before harvesting is commonly
referred to as the ‘rotation length’. A plantation goes through a cycle of
planting, growing, harvesting, and then replanting. The length of time between
planting and replanting may be from ten years up to seventy or eighty years[24]:
this is the rotation length.
5.31
Both softwoods and hardwoods can be grown for short- and long-rotation:
in general, short-rotation (perhaps 10 to 15 years) suits trees that are to be
chipped or pulped, and long-rotation (more than 20 years) suits trees that are
to be grown for sawlogs. As noted in the State of the Forests Report 2008,
the expansion of plantations since 1998 has been particularly focussed on
short-rotation hardwoods.[25] A graphic representation
of new plantation establishment is in Figure 5.2, below: it is mostly hardwood.
However, Australia’s timber and wood-product needs can only be met by plantations
of both short- and long-term rotation softwood and hardwoods.
5.32
Many submissions to the inquiry called attention to the fact that much
of the recent expansion in plantations has been in short-rotation regimes, and
called for future expansion to focus on long-rotation regimes.[26]
The greatest impediment to further expanding the long-rotation plantation
estate is the considerable investment period (with increased risks) and the
decades-long wait for a return on that investment.[27]
5.33
The establishment of new long-rotation plantations is clearly a priority
for Australia to ensure a more balanced industry and stronger domestic supply
chain. The following section will discuss the finance and investment challenge for
such plantations.
Figure 5.2 New plantation area reported, 1995-2010,
Australia (National Plantation Inventory)
Source Submission
59, Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, p.20.
Finance and investment
5.34
Historically, as noted above, investment in plantations came largely
from governments and state-owned agencies and corporations. However,
governments have generally not made direct investments in plantations for some
decades:
State Governments appear to have ceased or greatly reduced
their investment in establishing new plantations. It is difficult to see, if an
increase in plantation production is desired, where new investment will come
from.[28]
5.35
As discussed in Chapter 2, policy in the past two decades has emphasised
private establishment and ownership of plantations. Encouraging private
investment in long-rotation plantations is one of the biggest challenges for
the future of the Australian forestry industry.
5.36
Evidence from the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
underlined the need for the market to fund plantation expansion:
Australia's forest industry should be competitive,
sustainable, self-reliant and responsive to market signals. A stable operating
environment that provides certainty but allows free market mechanisms to have
influence will help to achieve this.[29]
5.37
As noted by many submissions to the inquiry, there are three main
disincentives to investment in long-rotation plantations. First, they involve a
much longer investment period than many other investments. Second, there is a
greater risk attached to the investment than for other investments. Third,
there is a lower rate of return than investors might receive for other
investments. As described by the NSW Forest Products Association:
The long time frames expose investors to greater liabilities
of resource failures, such as bushfires and political interference...Poor
profitability is attributed to the high initial costs of acquiring land,
establishing the plantation and the need for early silvicultural treatment.
That creates a huge opportunity cost of capital for a period of time until the
investment hopefully matures after several decades.[30]
Managed Investment Schemes
5.38
As noted by the submission from the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries
and Forestry, the expansion of the plantation estate was partly attributable to
changes in taxation law, made by the Australian Government.[31]
These changes led to the creation of managed investment schemes (MIS) in forest
plantations. Whilst this increased the short-rotation plantation estate, the
Committee found general agreement that MIS arrangements have so far done little
to encourage long-rotation plantations. The discussion of MIS and plantations
will address two of the major areas of concern – viability and usefulness.
5.39
MIS arrangements were developed to encourage new investment in the rural
sector. They helped to focus on the value of rural and regional industries.
However, as will be seen below, in some cases they were badly targeted and
poorly managed. Future investment strategies to encourage investment in the
rural sector will need to be carefully researched and redesigned with the
specific goals of the strategies in mind. Farmers and investors must work
together to ensure that such investments are broadly supported as part of
normal agricultural practice. Such goals could include, for example, the
encouragement of long rotation plantations. Whilst this is a general task
across rural economies, the Committee has made specific recommendations about
MIS and plantations.
Viability
5.40
For additional background information, the report of the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services’ Inquiry into aspects
of agribusiness managed investment schemes[32] contains useful
discussions of how MIS operates. That inquiry’s terms of reference referred to
two major MIS companies that went into administration in the first half of
2009. As noted by that Committee’s report, both outside events and structural
deficiencies within the MIS model have been blamed for their collapses.[33]
5.41
Criticism of MIS schemes in submissions to this inquiry have been broad
ranging, raising questions about both outside events and structural
deficiencies.
5.42
In respect of outside events, many submissions blamed the global
financial crisis. The NSW Forest Products Association noted that ‘highly
leveraged capital requirements brought about the collapse of [one] enterprise
in the Global Financial Crisis.’[34]
5.43
In respect of structural deficiencies, many blamed the poor conduct of individual
MIS scheme operators, and the failure of the MIS model to prevent this
occurring. New Forests Pty Ltd pointed out that ‘MIS companies were often
driven by financial product sales and occasionally became undisciplined in the
acquisition of land for forestry.’[35] Agriwealth Capital
claimed that ‘collapses arose because of the mismanagement by those entrusted
with the responsibility to properly manage the respective plantations.’[36]
5.44
Queensland Timber noted that the global financial crisis exposed ‘some
serious flaws in the operation of the MIS model, where future management
liabilities were not adequately accounted for.’[37]
The submission goes on to say that, with improvement to the model, MIS ‘remains
an important vehicle for investment in timber plantations into the future.’[38]
5.45
Proposed MIS plantations should develop a prospectus for the market that
reflects the fact that plantation products are commodities. Prospectuses must
be based on sound market principles, and properly researched. Getting funding
for plantations is a question of market investment, and proposals must be
prepared by investment market and financial experts, to get an effective
prospectus that reflects the needs in the marketplace.
Usefulness
5.46
There has been considerable debate about the kinds of plantations delivered
under MIS arrangements. As described by Mr Ian Ruscoe, of the Department of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, ‘there seems to have been some disjoint
between what has been planted in the plantation estate versus market demand.’[39]
5.47
As noted above, there is considerable agreement that MIS did little to
encourage hardwood sawlog plantation expansion. However, evidence to the
Committee suggests that some of the MIS plantation estate was poorly planned –
planting the wrong trees in the wrong places. According to Mr Nick Roberts, of
the Australian Forest Products Association,
We know that the MIS regime has worked to put trees in the
ground but has not worked to put the right trees in the right ground to meet
our actual needs. It is in the wrong locations; it is not located where the
processing plants are to allow leverage on existing infrastructure.
5.48
Miss Linda Sewell, of the Australian Forest Products Association,
suggested that MIS managers did not necessarily consider the best place to
locate plantations:
As an industry we probably would consider there are probably
enough trees in the ground but they are just in the wrong place...From a
private forestry perspective, that is typically what you would want to do; you
would want to put the trees in the ground where there is a reasonable
infrastructure anyway. But when you are looking at tools around things such as
MIS investment you have got a very different group of investors, who are really
just looking at the financial return. They do not care where the tree is.[40]
5.49
Regarding the kinds of species planted in MIS plantations, witnesses had
general comments to make about the suitability of these decisions:
The MIS tax incentives drove a lot of money into plantations
and it was like a gold rush. To get those trees in the ground by the end of
June meant that the wrong species were planted in the wrong place at the wrong
time. There was no prudent linkage to a productive outcome.[41]
5.50
In Victoria, witnesses gave evidence about the inability of MIS to put
the right species of trees in plantations: ‘We ended up with an MIS and blue
gums. It has failed us and we need to revisit [this] and look at why it failed
and start to rebuild.’[42]
5.51
The issue of species is also linked to that of location: the right kind
of tree must be grown near the right kind of infrastructure and processing
facilities:
We are in a situation here where I think about 60 per cent of
our plantation asset in this area from here [Grafton] to the Queensland border
is dunnii or white gum. It is ideal for pulping. We have no pulping facility.
We have no port access to export that product.[43]
5.52
However, as noted by Mr David Shelton, of New Forests Pty Ltd, the
original MIS structure was not tasked with ensuring that the best species of
tree was planted in the best location:
When the original MIS legislation was drafted it had the
mandate of encouraging plantation establishment. It did not say anything about
species, location et cetera. On those grounds, it was a tremendously effective
instrument—using the tax tool to do exactly that...The mandate then is for the
people charged with the policy design, the mechanism design, itself to deliver
not only an incentive for plantation establishments, but an incentive for
plantation establishment of softwoods in these sorts of locations... So there
are ways of doing it, it just comes back to your objective in the mechanism
design. Is it softwood and hardwood or is it just plantations?[44]
Changes to MIS
5.53
Whilst, as noted above, there is considerable agreement that MIS did
little to support new long-rotation (sawlog) plantations, evidence suggests
that the mechanism might be able to do so in future. As noted by Mr Ian Ruscoe
of the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, legislative change in
2007 was aimed at ensuring that long-rotation plantations could be supported by
MIS. In his words:
I think the government has made some conscious decisions to
try to increase the amount of longer rotation plantations. Specifically there
were additional changes to the tax law I think in 2007 that allowed secondary
trading of your investment. That was put in place to try to encourage people to
come in and invest for a period and then, when they thought the time was right,
they could sell up and someone else could buy that investment and grow it
through for 10 to 15 years to give us a longer rotation.[45]
5.54
Other evidence supported this view. As described by Mr Richard Stanton,
of the Australian Plantation Products and Paper Industry Council (A3P):
A provision was inserted into the amended legislation that
allowed an investor to sell a plantation part way through its life and get the
return on their investment that way, rather than waiting until the final
harvest, and not lose their tax deduction. We thought that was a good mechanism
to help encourage secondary markets in immature plantations under the MIS
system, but it did not have a chance to run its course before we saw the other
problems with MIS investment and corporate failure.[46]
5.55
Ms Lisa Marty, of the Victorian Association of Forest Industries,
supported the ability to trade MIS investments during the lifecycle of
long-rotation plantations,[47] and Dr Peter Volker, of
the Institute of Foresters of Australia said that this kind of flexibility
would be necessary to encourage long-rotation plantations through MIS.[48]
5.56
As discussed above, the events of the global financial crisis have
largely precluded a consideration of whether the secondary-trading amendments
have encouraged long-rotation plantations. However, in time this will be
possible.
Committee Comment
5.57
The Committee is aware of the broad range of views regarding the role of
MIS in plantation expansion. Some see MIS as an unfair tax break; others see
MIS as a way for plantations to compete on an equal footing with other
investments. In either case, the Committee believes that MIS amounts to
intervention by the Australian Government in the market, by changing the
incentives and costs of investment in plantations. This does not mean that MIS
is necessarily a good or a bad thing, but it must be assessed according to the
objective it is intended to achieve. For this, there must be clarity about why
such an intervention has been made.
5.58
For example, the Committee has heard considerable evidence alleging MIS failed
to ensure that plantations were established in appropriate locations and with
appropriate species. Many witnesses have, however, pointed out that the MIS
mechanism was not originally designed to ensure that these decisions would be
made appropriately.
5.59
The Committee believes that there are four steps for the Australian
Government to determine whether MIS remains a viable way to encourage
investment in plantations. These steps are, however, constructed around
plantations rather than around MIS itself.
5.60
First, the objective must be identified: in this case, the encouragement
of long-rotation plantations. Second, the best way to meet the objective must
be determined: is it necessary and appropriate for government to provide an
incentive to meet that objective? Third, the mechanism must be assessed: is MIS
the best mechanism to meet that objective? Four, if MIS is the best mechanism
to meet that objective, does it need to be altered to make it more effective?
Each step self-evidently follows from the previous one: if a negative answer is
found, then MIS is clearly not a viable way to encourage investment in plantations.
Recommendation 10 |
|
5.61 The Committee recommends the Australian Government lead a
process through COAG to create a national plan for plantations, to ensure
that:
- plantations of appropriate species are planted in appropriate
locations; and
- appropriate regional infrastructure exists or is planned and
funded.
|
Recommendation 11 |
|
5.62 The Committee recommends the Australian Government:
- decide whether the encouragement of long-rotation plantations
is an appropriate objective of policy;
- establish whether it is necessary and appropriate for
government to provide an incentive to meet that objective;
- if it is, set out a clear plan to meet that objective,
according to the national plan for plantations;
- assess whether MIS as a mechanism can meet that objective;
- if MIS can meet that objective, determine whether it needs to
be altered to make it more effective; and
- if MIS cannot meet that objective, determine whether other
mechanisms could do so.
|
5.63
Long-rotation plantations can be viable through the resources of various
markets. A new market opportunity is available by generating credits for carbon
sequestration, through the Carbon Farming Initiative, as discussed in Chapter
3.
Management
5.64
As frequently discussed during the inquiry, plantations must be
carefully and actively managed over their life-cycle to produce particular
timber and wood-products: this management is commonly referred to as
‘silviculture’. As noted in the next chapter, farm forestry can be a tool of
land management, ensuring that agricultural land is both productive and kept in
good condition. Plantations can be used in the same way, assisting with the
management of salinity for example.
5.65
Management must be specific to the product being produced. Submissions to
the inquiry noted that many plantations have not been managed for sawlog
production.[49] The Department of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry submitted that ‘Less than 10% of hardwood
plantations, perhaps no more than 5%, are managed for sawlog production.’[50]
The remaining 90% or 95% of hardwood plantations are managed for lower-value
products, such as woodchips.
5.66
There is considerable silvicultural expertise in Australia, but, as
discussed in Chapter 8, Australia is continuing to rely on foreign-trained
forestry professionals. Improving the domestic interest in forestry careers
will help to ensure that Australia maintains the necessary skills to manage
plantations for all kinds of products. This section of the chapter will discuss
the role of thinning, the impacts of plantations on the local environment, and
the impacts of plantations on the local community.
Thinning
5.67
Plantations that are managed for sawlogs are typically thinned at least
once. Thinning involves the selective removal of some trees in a plantation in
order to manage the growth of the remaining trees. According to the Institute
of Foresters of Australia, ‘softwood plantations need to be thinned at least
once during the rotation to produce quality sawlogs of reasonable sizes, and
the best sawlogs are produced from plantations that are thinned two or three
times.’[51] Many submissions
discussed thinning trials and experimentation with different thinning regimes.[52]
Certain species being grown for ‘appearance-grade’ timber must also be pruned
during the rotation.[53]
5.68
The CSIRO submitted that, whilst there is considerable knowledge about
suitable thinning and pruning regimes, the application of this knowledge to
plantation management has been limited.[54]
5.69
This is an important part of the plantation management, but it also
means that plantation owners must find a use for ‘thinnings’. Associate
Professor J. Doland Nichols noted that:
A major challenge for us is to convince forest owners to thin
- currently there is no market for wood chips within close proximity to most of
these plantations. We also have no know uses for small logs. Thus the
plantations stay unthinned, meaning that they are unlikely ever to produce good
sawlogs.[55]
5.70
At the moment, thinnings are often exported as woodchips, without any
further processing in Australia.[56] New technology allows
logs to be ‘peeled’ much earlier, providing a new market for thinning. New
technologies will enable plantations to be more profitable and encourage
improving management. This issue will be discussed further below, in the final
section of the chapter.
Environmental impact of plantations
5.71
As noted in the first section of this chapter, there is some community
concern about the impact of plantations on competition for water. Additional
concerns have been raised about the impact of plantations on the local
environment, including specific concern about single-species plantations
(monocultures). However, plantations can also play a positive role in improving
the local environment.
5.72
One submission alleged chemical contamination of water catchments as a
result of aerial spraying of plantations.[57] Another submission
stated that:
the impact of the toxic products released by large acreages
of monoculture exotic eucalypt plantations on ecosystem health and water
quality has not been addressed with full and contemporary risk assessments.[58]
5.73
However, there is no simple rule for or against monocultures as opposed
to mixed plantings. The appropriateness of a particular kind of plantation will
depend on its location and context. As noted during a public hearing:
We tend to the view that diverse systems are always more
robust and better to have than single monocultures, but that does not mean to
say that there are not places where single species plantations can play an
important role in a range of areas. The important issue with that is around
making good, wise, sensible location decisions, and those decisions need to
take consideration of the other impacts...and things like other pollutants—like
the management of nutrients, pesticides and the like into adjoining waterways.[59]
5.74
Some submissions discussed the possibility for plantations to have a
positive effect on biodiversity:
plantations of all sorts can provide habitat for native birds
and mammal species associated with forests, woodlands and open country.
Plantations can make a positive contribution to biodiversity conservation and
hence sustainable landscapes. These contributions can be enhanced through
measures such as planting blocks, planting close to remnants, retaining
remnants within the plantation, harvesting in patches to retain connectivity
and including some rough barked species and understorey.[60]
5.75
The Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Populations and
Communities agreed with this notion, but emphasised that the opposite could
also occur if plantations are not properly managed:
Well managed plantations can contribute to maintaining
biodiversity and providing ecosystem services...there is potential for the
Australian forestry industry to extend environmental benefits through plantation
configuration (for example, expanding biodiverse native tree plantings where
appropriate), the location of plantations in the landscape (for example, to
provide additional ecological connectivity) and their on-going management.
Conversely, poorly implemented plantations may have negative impacts on
biodiversity, such as native vegetation clearing and ecosystem fragmentation.[61]
5.76
The CSIRO also pointed out the potential for plantations – planted in
the right area – to increase available freshwater by reducing salinity:
Plantations can also impact on salinity and have been
suggested as an attractive tool to help manage salinity in land and rivers.
Plantations established in salt source catchments such as those in the
headwaters of major river systems, may have a net positive impact on freshwater
supplies.[62]
5.77
Australian Forest Growers note that plantations can play other positive
roles, including reducing runoff during storms, which can ‘lessen flood damage,
landscape erosion and river siltation.’[63]
5.78
Above all, it is clear that there is no simple, straightforward way to characterise
the impact of plantations on the local environment. There are obviously some
places where plantations are not suitable land-uses. In places where
plantations are suitable, each plantation must be carefully planned, and
sensitively integrated into its local environment. Dr Charles Zammit, of the Department
of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Populations and Communities, summed up
some major considerations:
The first part is the mix of plantings—the biodiversity
versus the monoculture. Encouraging the industry to, where it can, mix the
plantation species has an environment benefit. It can also allow you to get a
diversity of product. If you structure it carefully there is room for diversity
of product mix from a more diverse pool and different species of trees. [The
second part is]...around planning in the region and the careful location of
plantations in the context of regional land use planning for a range of
benefits, including things like corridors, adaptation to climate change and so
on. The third [part] is the ongoing efforts around stable forest
management—thinking about the systems for managing fire, weeds, water run-off
and all of those sorts of questions.[64]
Community impact of plantations
5.79
Two major community impacts from plantations will be discussed in this
section – the impact on economic growth, and the impact on social dislocation. As
noted in other sections of this report, it is essential for the forestry
industry to maintain and improve its social licence. In order to ensure a
viable future, the industry must have the support of the Australian community.
Economic growth
5.80
A case study from the State of the Forests Report 2008, based on
the ‘great southern region’ of Western Australia, suggested that plantations
had both a direct and indirect regional economic impact:
...it is estimated that 17 jobs are created for every $1
million spent in the forest industry. In addition, each direct job produces 0.7
indirect jobs in the region, as well as employment outside the region when
goods and services are imported from elsewhere. The region generally
experienced either rural population growth or reduced rates of rural population
decline between 1991 and 2004 due to the expansion of the plantation
estate...The supply of local independent employment in the forest sector and
the integration of plantations with multiple forms of land use have contributed
to a diverse economic base that has helped stabilise the population and improved
prospects for long-term economic growth in the region.[65]
5.81
Australian Forest Growers submitted that ‘plantation establishment can
contribute significantly to stable economic growth while at the same time
conferring added environmental protection in regional areas.’[66]
However, Farmed Forests of the North East suggest that ‘this growth tends to
mainly accrue in regional centres and where plantation expansion is rapid, may
be perceived negatively by the community and give rise to social conflict.’[67]
5.82
Dr Jacki Schirmer cautioned against viewing economic benefits in
simplistic ways:
The eucalypt and softwood plantations making up the majority
of Australia’s current plantation estate generate more jobs in total than
broadacre sheep and beef grazing and cropping. However, they only generate more
jobs once plantations are mature and enter a cycle of harvesting and
replanting, and when the downstream processing generated after harvest is
included in the analysis. Jobs in the plantation industry are typically located
in regional towns and cities, whereas agricultural jobs are typically located
in smaller towns and on rural land, indicating that a shift to plantations is
accompanied by a change in the location of employment. This means that there is
no simple ‘positive’ or ‘negative’ impact of plantation expansion on jobs: some
regions will benefit from job growth, and others will experience net loss of
jobs, as a result of the establishment of plantations on land previously used
for agriculture.[68]
Social dislocation
5.83
Some submissions have spoken of the social dislocation that can follow
plantation expansion. Examples include Private Forests Tasmania:
Plantation developments have often caused localised levels of
concerns in rural communities due to concerns about the loss of agricultural
land and social dislocation as farming families move from the area impacting on
the viability of local community services.[69]
Australian Forest Growers:
a key area of identified concern is the social dislocation of
communities purportedly as a result of the establishment of broad scale
plantations. While AFG continues to hold the view that these concerns are at
least overstated it remains the case that substantial variation to traditional
land use ‘offends’ many rural communities.[70]
And Timber Queensland:
Recent expansion of the plantation estate in some regions has
caused friction with other traditional industries and resulted in generally
poor community acceptance of plantations. These conflicts have been
particularly prevalent in north Queensland, where plantations have been
established on former cane land.[71]
5.84
Timber Communities Australia has cited research undertaken by Dr Jacki
Schirmer, finding that:
plantation establishment on a large scale does have some
social impacts in the short term but this has to be weighed against the fact
that rural populations are declining in many areas, regardless of the
establishment of plantations...Where plantation establishment is accompanied by
wood processing industries, the socio-economic benefits to the region can be
significant. Schirmer has identified the timber industry as a significant
factor in population increases in Tumut and Adelong, at a time when many other
towns in the region are suffering declines.[72]
5.85
The impact of plantations on local communities is varied, and as noted
at the start of the chapter, the forestry industry must actively work to ensure
that the negative impact is minimised, and the positive impact amplified. If
the community sees financial benefits for the region as a whole, it will be
more prepared to accept well thought-out plantation enterprises.
Committee Comment
5.86
This report has highlighted a number of important issues for the future
of plantation management. Each of these areas is fundamental to both the
viability of plantations – including long-rotation plantations – and the
necessary improvement in forestry’s social licence.
5.87
The active management of plantations through thinning and pruning is
central to viable plantations, and it relies on the professional expertise of foresters.
It is unfortunate that some plantations have not been properly managed, and
that the valuable timber and wood resource therein has not been fully utilised.
The Committee values the professional expertise of foresters, and looks forward
to seeing that expertise used to remedy some of the poor plantation management
of the past.
5.88
A plantation can have a real impact on the local community. During one
of its site inspections, the Committee was shown a small rural hamlet that was
all but deserted, in part due to a new plantation. Social dislocation is not an
inevitable result of plantation expansion, and there is no hard-and-fast rule
about whether a plantation will be beneficial or detrimental. The plantation
sector of the forestry industry must make sure that it is actively engaged with
local communities, in order to build trust and make sure that new plantations
do not cause social dislocation.
Products and innovation
5.89
This inquiry’s terms of reference include ‘opportunities for
diversification, value adding and product innovation’. Plantations are the
source of many varied timber and wood-products, and there is potential for
greater and more efficient production through innovation. As noted above by
Associate Professor J. Doland Nichols, there are currently by-products of
plantation thinning that do not have a market, and hence thinning is not always
performed. To be strong, flexible and competitive well into the future,
plantation forestry must find new and more efficient ways to process all
resources coming out of plantations.
5.90
The submission from the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and
Forestry includes numerous examples of current research into ‘diversification,
value adding & product innovation’, and many of these projects relate to
plantation timber.[73] This research is vital as
it is not possible to simply substitute plantation sawlogs for native forest
sawlogs in all cases. For example, the shorter rotation of plantation logs
means that they are much smaller than native forest logs. The CSIRO submission
points out that native forest sawmills could not always process plantation
sawlogs without mill changes. It continues:
Substantial investment is required to modify sawing equipment
and drying methods. Appropriately modified processing systems should be able to
operate profitably while paying an acceptable log price to plantation growers.[74]
5.91
This was reiterated by Dr Glen Kile et al, who submitted that :
...the properties of the potential [plantation] sawlogs are
different from the mature native forest resource and the current processing
schedules and technology require further development to enable profitable
processing.[75]
5.92
And, as the CSIRO also notes, this kind of investment and innovation relies
on the security of plantation sawlog supply.[76]
5.93
Some submissions criticised the perceived decline of investment in
innovation, particularly in recent years. Dr Glen Kile et al claim that:
The last decade and particularly the last five years have
seen a steady decline in investment in forest and forest products research and
development capability and capacity. This has occurred in all State
Governments, CSIRO, and Universities and in industry. Short sighted cost
cutting that targets research capability as the first target has become all too
common.[77]
5.94
Professor Philip Evans describes five past ‘innovations’ were critical
to the development of the forest products industry:
- chemical pulping of
eucalypts;
- high temperature
drying of pine;
- machine stress
grading of pine;
- wood-fibre-reinforced
cement composites; and
- advanced breeding and
selection technology for pine.[78]
However, Professor Evans adds that ‘many
of the key elements of an ‘innovation system’ to support the forest products
industry were once present in Australia. The same is not true today.’[79]
5.95
There are other trends that underline the need for continued innovation,
including the declining value of woodchips,[80] the export of low value
products and the import of high value products,[81]
and the difficulty attracting investment to long-rotation plantations. According
to evidence from Mr Michael Bayley, further innovation will enable plantation
timber and wood-products to be of the highest value possible:
In terms of a priority of plantation processing options we
really should be prioritising sawn timber, followed up by engineered products,
followed up by a pulp mill with a paper mill attached, followed up by a pulp
mill for export pulp, export woodchips, then at the bottom of the barrel is
whole log exports.[82]
5.96
In addition, many submissions and witnesses have mentioned the potential
for plantation products to be used for energy production: this will be
discussed in Chapter 7, below.
Committee Comment
5.97
The Committee has discussed innovation in many parts of this report, and
it has an important role to play across the forestry industry. Evidence has
frequently underlined the dynamic role that innovation plays: finding additional
or new high-value uses for a plantation resource not only provides additional
income (often long before the plantation is harvested) but it can also
encourage better plantation management.
5.98
The Committee is keen to see innovation and new technologies developed
and taken up across the forestry industry. New technologies including the use
of lasers, processing methods for thinnings and prunings and other innovations
will continue to make the industry more flexible, efficient and dyanamic.
5.99
The Committee believes that Australia should make every effort to export
high-value products. This is an enormous challenge, particularly when
Australian processors and manufacturers have foreign competitors with lower
costs (and often lower standards). The forestry industry must rise to this
challenge, so that Australia’s plantations are not harvested merely for
woodchips, which are the lowest value product. Ongoing innovation, driven and
led by a competitive and forward-looking industry will ensure that Australia
can produce better products in a more efficient way, helping to secure the
long-term viability of plantation forestry in Australia.
5.100
Australian timbers are unique, and there will be increasing
opportunities in future to develop and market specialty products grown in
plantations. This will be an opportunity for diversification, giving the
forestry industry additional products for both domestic and international
markets.
5.101
Certification will also enable plantation forestry to increase the value
of its products, gaining additional market access both in Australia and
overseas. As noted in other parts of the report, certification provides assurance
of the sustainability of timber and wood products, and certified plantation
products will be more competitive in the marketplace.
5.102
The Committee understands the need for private investment in the
forestry industry. Whilst MIS have lost support at the moment, there needs to
be a means by which MIS or a new investment scheme can be developed,
implemented and overseen to enable the expansion of medium- and long-rotation
plantations around Australia.