Browsing by Subject "timber"
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Item Impact of a National Guard Training Facility on Minnesota's Forest Resources(University of Minnesota, Duluth, 1987-04) Natural Resources Research Institute. BioProducts DivisionEarly in 1986 Minnesota National Guard officials announced a proposal for a 200,000 acre training facility in northern Minnesota. As proposed, the facility would be used to train tank, artillery and infantry units and would include a large artillery range. The two areas under consideration now include a site near Aurora and a site in Koochiching and Itasca Counties. The Natural Resources Research Institute (NRRI) has studied the impact this kind of training facility would have on present timber supplies and future forest products developrrent in the area of the proposed site. Specifically addressed are the present and future supply and demand for timber at the two Minnesota sites under consideration; the impacts on the timber supply at other military camps in the United States; and the anticipated impact on the timber supply at the two proposed sites should the facility be built. Findings from the study showed that demand for wood fiber will continue to grow in the foreseeable future in these areas. The proposal for a National Guard training facility is likely to reduce available resources due to various restrictions placed on the forest; to damage the remaining available resources due to military activities; and could delay or cancel industry expansion plans, due to diminished timber supply and industry concern over long-term commitments to commercial forestry.Item Marketing timber from the private woodland(University of Minnesota. Agriculture Extension Service, 1985) Blinn, Charles R; Hendricks, Lewis TItem Status of the Minnesota Logging Sector in 2021(University of Minnesota, 2023-09) Blinn, Charles R.; Nolle, David A.Logging businesses in Minnesota have been surveyed intermittently since the late 1970s to assess their status and health. A mail survey was conducted in spring 2022 to assess the status of Minnesota’s logging sector during 2021. The survey was a follow up to previous surveys, the most recent of which were conducted in 2016 and 2011. A total of 162 usable responses were received (50.5% usable response rate). Many of the reported findings from the two prior surveys were repeated in this survey. For example, businesses and equipment continue to age. The average amount of capital invested in a business is under $500,000. County forests, private woodlands, and the State of Minnesota were the most important sources of stumpage. Winter harvesting produces about half (53%) of the total annual volume harvested. Feller-bunchers and grapple skidders were the most common in-woods equipment. While there are many small volume logging businesses in Minnesota, collectively they produce a small percentage of the total annual harvest. Most harvest sites were within 60 miles of the business’ location. Minnesota’s logging businesses faced new challenges in 2021 with the Covid-19 pandemic, mill closures and a shortage of truck drivers. Higher volume logging businesses tended to be more negatively impacted by each of those three challenges. While many businesses were impacted, approximately 81% reported that their business at least broke-even in 2021. The most commonly cited concerns were the lack/loss of markets, difficulty in securing labor, rising costs for everything (e.g., stumpage, equipment, parts, fuel, labor), delivered prices which were relatively flat, regulations which hurt the industry, and displeasure that mills increased their competition for stumpage at auctions as that took away potential timber sales from small businesses.