International demand for pruned logs at all-time high: Forest manager
International demand for pruned logs from New Zealand is the highest ever seen by a forest manager with 30 years of experience in the sector.
John Turkington owns John Turkington Forestry – a ManawatÅ« company that plants, manages, harvests and markets radiata pine, and he cannot understand why forest owners do not prune plantation forests.
For 15 years China had been a strong market for low-value, unpruned logs, but that was not the case now and was unlikely to be in the future, he said.
âThings are fundamentally changed in my view, in China. And this is where we are going to be at,â Turkington said.
âThe crashes are getting closer and closer together and the range of prices is becoming more and more marked.
âSo you used to have a fluctuation around a $20 spread – now itâs more like $60 (between the high and low prices).â
Export log prices are at an eight-year low and many harvesting gangs are currently without work.
The stable growth area is with pruned logs, according to Turkington.
âPruned logs per tonne is sort of sitting firmly at $200 or north of $200, it depends where it is sold to,â he said.
âWhereas the A grade, which is the predominant diet in China, is sitting in the early $100s.â
The added bonus with pruned logs was they were turned into product and then sent offshore so the âvalue add happens in NZ, which is another bonusâ.
Turkington admitted that sheep and beef farmers with sizeable wood lots at present were not going to have available funds to prune the trees, especially when the payback was 15 or 20 years away.
But he added: âThey could plant fewer trees and make sure they prune themâ.
âThereâs always been a market for pruned logs and thereâs been relative stability over an extended period of time.
âBut if you go back the last three or four years, the price has increased and the differential between the pruned logs and the unpruned logs is getting greater.â
He said while he was not a sawmill owner, the demand must be there or they would not keep putting the price up or keep ordering pruned logs if they were able to fill their files.
Source: NZ Herald
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