Header: Header: Header:

Good Times Don’t Last Long Sometimes

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing June 2021

Never—for as long as we’ve been conducting an annual Sawmill Operations & Capital Expenditure Survey—have softwood lumbermen and hardwood lumbermen in the U.S. expressed at the same time as much optimism for the immediate future, with about 92% of the softwood lumbermen and 88% of the hardwood lumbermen forecasting good-to-excellent business for the remainder of this year and into 2022.

This issue contains the reports on the results of our survey, with the softwood lumber article starting on page 16 and the hardwood lumber story beginning on page 42. Those articles obviously separate out the results for the two lumber segments. But it’s also interesting to combine the results and gain a quick snapshot of the U.S. lumber industry as a whole.

The survey was e-mailed to the lumbermen several times during April. The respondents— mostly owners, presidents, general managers and plant managers—represent about 300 individual sawmills. About 35% of those mills produce mostly 2 in. lumber, 30% produce 1 in. boards, and 12% are heavier to timbers.

About 38% of the mills have allocated at least $1 million toward capital expenditure for 2021-2022. They were given 45 areas in the mill to check off as to where the money is going. Here’s the top 10:

—Maintenance

—Log yard handling

—Lumber handling forklifts

—Dry kilns and controls

—Downstream sawing (gangs-edgers-trimmers)

—Debarkers

—Filing room equipment

—Planer mill sorting and stacking

—Metal detectors

—Dust control

The results of the granddaddy question of them all: 46% forecast their lumber business situation as excellent for 2021-2022 and 46% forecast it as good.

That’s no surprise, given the tsunami of record lumber prices, which has been driven by several factors, supply-demand obviously at the heart of it along with some supply chain logistics, but more specifically a supply that has yet to catch up with demand dating back a year ago to the pandemic, as home repair surprisingly boomed to the degree it did, and then new housing took off and continues to rise, partially brought on by that demographic of young professionals who had too much student debt to enter the market, until now, and a flux of oldtimers deciding to build second homes or sell their existing ones and build a new one, and now perhaps multi-housing finding some momentum, all of this leaving sawmills to wrestle with their production capabilities, while wrestling with their labor pool, and now staring straight into another 20% potential leap in new housing—if you’re thinking 2 million starts.

Still, especially given the “new” federal government, as some comments in our survey bear out, lumbermen may be uneasy not knowing how soft the softening of these unprecedented lumber prices and demand will be once it comes, how quickly it might come, and how much government interference or some strange occurrence will be entangled with it.

RELATED ARTICLES

Survey Says: Lumbermen Are Feeling The COVID-19 Pinch

Latest News

UFP Industries Acquires 50% Stake In Dempsey Wood Products

UFP Industries has announced that its affiliate, PalletOne, Inc., has acquired a 50% equity stake in South Carolina sawmill company, Dempsey Wood Products, LLC. The purchase agreement includes options for PalletOne to purchase…

New SYP Sawmill Stirs Up Dust

Looks like construction of the new Canfor $160 million southern yellow pine sawmill in DeRidder, La. is in motion, according to these photos taken by Senior Editor Jessica Johnson as she was passing through the area in early June on an assignment trip…

Justin Price Becomes 75th FPS President

Evergreen Engineering co-CEO Justin Price will serve as president of the Forest Products Society for the 2022-23 term. Price takes over from Terry Liles, Director of Raw Materials for Huber Engineered Woods…

Nova Scotia’s Elmsdale Lumber Announces Big McDonough Project

Elmsdale Lumber Co. in Nova Scotia has engaged McDonough Manufacturing for what will be a complete sawmill modernization over the summers of 2022 and 2023. This project will see upgrades to both primary and secondary sawing systems designed to increase capacity and more importantly yield…

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.