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Oriented-strand fiber board ("chip") mills can process as much wood in one
month as an average-size sawmill consumes in an entire year. In the Southeast,
this tremendous consumption capacity forces chip mills to draw raw material
from a large area-typically a 75 mile radius-and has encouraged the management
of forests specifically for chipping material. This brand of forest management
has been characterized not only by shorter rotations, but also the proliferation
of clearcutting, which produces more wood per acre for less cost.
The chip mill industry prides itself on "efficiency"-chipping more volume in
less time for less cost. While this may be good for short-term profits, it is
not good for the economy, or the forest. According to available information,
chip mills in the Southeast produce about 317,250 tons annually, equivalent
to more than 8,700 acres of forest clear cut every year for each mill. With
at least 140 chip mills operating in the region, the annual loss is estimated
at more than 1,500 square miles of forests.
In the Southeast, private lands provide a major source of raw material for
chip mills. Although there are many voluntary forest-related programs, the region
has virtually no mandatory regulations that apply to the management of private
forest land. Comprehensive forest protection legislation and regional sustainable
forestry plans, which are effective in some states, have yet to surface in the
Southeast. While laws to ensure adequate reforestation following harvest are
in place in some southern states, many lament that these regulations do not
address other critical ecosystem components. The rapid depletion of forests
by chip mills has had devastating impacts on the diversity of the region's forest-dependant
economy. Some sawmills have been forced out of business. Reports show that softwood
cutting is exceeding growth, and that hardwood shortage is imminent.
Despite these ominous trends, studies indicate that the best potential for
job growth in the forest products industry lies with solid wood manufacturing
(i.e. sawmills). One reason is that sawmills and other solid wood firms employ
twice as many people as the pulpwood segment per unit of wood harvested, which
means more jobs per tree. For example, a box and pallet company in North Carolina
processes 13 truck loads of trees every day and employs 90 people, while a chip
mill company that chips 70 truckloads every day has only 8 employees. In another
example, furniture manufacturers in Alabama generate 40 jobs for every million
dollars invested, while chip mills contribute only one job for every million
dollars invested. Differences like these are largely attributable to the fact
that chip mills use large machines and very few people to process trees into
chips. Sawmills and secondary producers (such as furniture makers and flooring
manufacturers), however, are more dependant on labor for their finished products.
Moreover, the few jobs created by chip mills are relatively low paying (ranging
from $8 to $14 per hour) and no value is added to the resource before it leaves
the community. The value-adding jobs are exported up to hundreds of miles away
in another state. Profits and better-paying management jobs derived from the
community's forests end up far from the community.
For nearby communities, the presence of a chip mill in an area means noise
and dust pollution, hazardous truck traffic on rural roads and bridges, real
property de-valuation, and water quality degradation. In addition, local tax
money is used to accommodate chip mill facilities. Hundreds of trucks a day
deliver trees to a chip mill. Road improvements and maintenance are at the community's
expense. Chip mills seek millions of dollars in tax credits to build the facilities,
including road construction and tax-free construction loans.
Despite these legitimate concerns, citizens faced with the threat of a chip
mill have little or no legal recourse to get local governments or permitting
agencies to deny permits to the chip mills. To compound the problem, large corporations
spend both time and money convincing local authorities and politicians that
citizen's concerns are unfounded, and that the chip mill will contribute jobs
and money to the local economy.
Activists in the Southeast are calling for action to resolve the chip mill
problem. Some of the steps they are proposing include a comprehensive, regional
study of the impacts of chip mills; a moratorium on new mills; annual US Forest
Service inventories of timber supplies; a ban on importing and exporting raw
forest products; incentives for landowners to selectively manage forests on
long rotations; and reform of the chip mill permitting process. Even so, chip
mills are, at least in the near term, a permanent fixture in the Southeastern
landscape. The impacts of such large scale industry will clearly be felt for
decades to come.
Article excerpted from "Chipping Forests and Jobs: A report on the economic
and environmental impacts of chip mills in the Southeast." The complete report
is available from Dogwood Alliance at 828-883-5889 or
via email at dogwood@essential.org
Chip Mill Update and
Request for Member Action
Last September, a letter was sent by fourteen environmental and civic organizations
to the then Governor of South Carolina, David Beasley, asking that he look into
the problems associated with clearcutting of forests to supply chip mills. The
Governor did not respond meaningfully. Now that the political situation has
changed and there is a new Governor from the opposite party, there is a consensus
among the groups that the letter should be resent (with some additional information)
and perhaps this time it would generate a more concerned and productive response.
The new letter will address many issues associated with this industry, including
the recent actions by South Carolina's Department of Health & Environmental
Control regarding the permit for the Norbord mega-chip mill in Laurens County.
The letter will be asking the Governor to: 1) place a moratorium on the licensing
of any new high capacity wood chipping facilities until a comprehensive study
of cumulative, secondary, and off-site environmental and economic impacts of
the existing facilities in South Carolina is undertaken and completed; 2) that
a thorough study of the potential logging impacts of the newly permitted Norbord
Industries chip mill in Laurens County be initiated as a case study for launching
a state-wide chip mill assessment; and 3) that the State of South Carolina partner
with federal agencies (EPA, USFWS and others) who are now considering a region-wide
study to examine the problems associated with industrial scale logging.
What you can do is write to Governor Hodges requesting he
initiate these recommendations, and state your concerns about the depletion
and degradation to the environment and communities that this industry leaves
in its path. The Governor's address is:
Governor Jim Hodges
Governor's Office
Wade Hampton Building 1st Floor
Box 11369
Columbia, SC 29211
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