Transcript PPT
Wood availability
for the European
wood-based industries
Bernard de Galembert
ECE-FAO Seminar
Strategies for the sound use of wood
Poiana – Brasov, 24-27 March 2003
Future wood availability in
question …
300
250
Consumption
Capacity
232 mill. m³
276 mill. m³
Supply
Roundwood
Wood
availability
234 mill. m³
2005 & beyond
200
Sawmill chips. +
recycl. wood
Energy
150
Particle board
100
Mechanical pulp
50
Chemical pulp
0
2000
2000
2005+
2005
Further study was needed
The importance of the forest cluster
Food products and beverages
Forest Industry Cluster
• 400 billion € turnover
• 3.5 million jobs
• 9% manufacturing
sector added value
Industries
Motor vehicles, trailers
and semi-trailers
Basic metals
Pharmaceutical, medicinal
chemicals and botanical products
Basic chemicals
0
20
40
60
80
Value added
100
120
bill. €
Forest resources in Europe
15%
Mixed
30%
55%
Deciduous
Conifers
• 329 million ha
• 30% managed for wood production
EU growing forest resource
Mil ha
340000 hectares/year
116
115
114
113
112
0
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
Forest – a growing resource
Mil. m3 over bark
800
700
600
500
Net annual increment
400
Fellings
300
200
100
0
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
25 m3/sec. of which 12 are not used
How to mobilise it
Working assumptions
• Average demand for wood products: 2%/year
Mil m3
400
350
300
Fibre board
Particle board
Chemical pulp
Mechanical pulp
Sawmilling
250
200
150
100
50
0
1999
2005
• Various owners supply elasticities
2010
3 policy developments
• Nature oriented forest
management
• Climate change mitigation
• Promotion of renewable
energy sources
Nature-oriented management
Enhance nature conservation values in
the forests
Reduced harvesting
Changed wood quality
and type
Climate change
Enhance forest potential to sequester
carbon
Postponed harvesting
Changing management
practices
Renewable energy
Promote the use of wood as a source of
renewable energy
Competing use of wood
Distorted wood market
Potential wood shortfall
2010 27 million m3/year
2030 89 million m3/year
2060 195 million m3/year
Vision for the wood supply
« Rather than waiting for the potential
shortfall to become a reality, we have to
start now to safeguard the availability of
wood in terms of quantity, quality and
costs, whilst improving the industry’s
sustainability credentials »
Towards a sustainable future