Transcript
Page 1: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

SC Forestry Association SC Forestry Association Annual MeetingAnnual Meeting

Henry E. (Gene) KodamaHenry E. (Gene) KodamaSC State ForesterSC State Forester

November 1, 2012November 1, 2012

Page 2: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

The Right to Practice ForestryThe Right to Practice Forestry

• 2011 Legislation

• Interpretation and enforcement

• Major milestone for forestry

Page 3: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

2012 Legislative Successes2012 Legislative Successes

• SC Forestry Commission Budget

• Property and Firefighter Protection Act

• Prescribed Fire Act

• Timber Theft Act

Page 4: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

SC Forestry Commission Budget• Funding dropped from $18 M to $10 M over four years but leveled in 2011

• Staffing had to be dropped from 380 to 280, and more reductions would be needed

• However, funding recovery started in 2012 with increase to $12.4 M.

Page 5: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

Property and Firefighter Protection Act

• Funding to begin replacing unreliable firefighting equipment

• Four years of work to design and pass legislation

• Creates equipment replacement funding for 5 years ($3 M/yr)

Page 6: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

Prescribed Fire Act • Clarified Certified Prescribed Fire

Manager role

• Increased liability protection for Certified Burners:

•Not liable for smoke-related damages unless gross negligence or recklessness proven•Not liable for fire-related damages unless negligence proven

• Smoke Management Guidelines became agency regulations

Page 7: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

Timber Theft Act• Increased penalties for forest products theft based on value taken

• Dramatically increased fines and length of imprisonment for repeat offenders

• Example: Product value greater than $5,000 and second offense:

• Felony Conviction

• Minimum fine of $10,000 (max $20,000)

•Imprisoned not more than 10 years

Page 8: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

Why work so hard on legislation?Why work so hard on legislation?

• SCFA mission: To create “policies that encourage management, utilization, and conservation of forest resources while maintaining or strengthening the pro-business climate for the” forest industry

• SCFC mission: “To protect and develop the forest resources of South Carolina”

•Legislation is a tactic used to accomplish the mission

Page 9: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

For legislative and mission success:For legislative and mission success:

• Use a “Forestry Community” approach: SCFA, SCFC, and forestry and conservation partners working together

• Work closely with Governor’s Office and General Assembly as partners

• Understand the Forestry Cycle and what drives it, explain it, and expand it

(e.g. 20/15 Project)

Page 10: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

• $17.4 B economic impact

• 90,000 jobs

• From 23.4 M tons of wood

Forestry CycleForestry Cycle

Page 11: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

Macro-economic Industry Drivers

• Wood production and consumption increase to new levels after recessions

• Forestry is a global industry, and this trend intensifies

• Population growth and wood use increase dramatically

• Wood shortages intensify in Asia and the Pacific

• Europe’s hunger for wood pellets increases• Canadian wood impact lessens

Page 12: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

Macro-economic Industry Drivers

• Global wood shortages predicted within a few years

• South expands its role as world’s largest wood producer

• Forests (wood) recognized as strategic natural resource

• Plantation production is a key to meeting demand

Page 13: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

SC Forestry

• 13.1 M acres of forest land• 88% private and 12% public• 350,000 family forest owners (200,000 own

<10 acres)• 77 primary mills (7 pulp/paper mills and 39

sawmills). Over 500 secondary mills• Wood production: 73% family forests, 19%

industry, and 8% public. [92% private]

Page 14: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

SC Forestry’s Economic Impact

• #1 in jobs (90,000)• #1 in wages ($4.1B)• #1 cash crop ($700 M)• #1 Charleston port

export • $1.3 B export total• $17.4 B in total

economic impact…while providing clean water and air, wildlife habitat, recreation, and desirable quality of life. “An Ideal Industry”

Page 15: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

SC Forestry’s Economic Impact

• $17.4 B from 23.4 M tons of wood

• One ton = $744 economic impact

• 260 tons = one job• 10.4 log trucks = one job

…while providing clean water and air, wildlife habitat, recreation, and desirable quality of life.

“An Ideal Industry”

Page 16: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

20/15 Project

•26.9 M tons of wood or increased manufacturing

• 104,000 jobs

• $20 B economic impact

Forestry Expansion OpportunityForestry Expansion Opportunity

Page 17: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

The Right to Practice ForestryThe Right to Practice Forestry

• Expands Forestry Cycle

• Increases job numbers

• Increases per capita income

• Improves investment returns

• Maintains working forests

• Enhances water and air quality

• Improves wildlife habitat

• Improves quality of life

• Improves the state economy

Page 18: SC Forestry Association  Annual Meeting

SC has a wonderful forest resource, outstanding forestry expertise, and a

bright future!


Top Related