Header: Header: Header:

WWPA Conducts Annual Meeting In Washington

Scenic Skamani Lodge at the Columbia River Gorge hosted the Western Wood Products Assn. annual meeting and also the board meeting of the Softwood Lumber Board during May 24-26.

Lumber producer companies represented included Bennett Lumber Products, Blanca Forest Products, Boise Cascade, Bright Wood, Collins, F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber, Hampton Lumber, Idaho Forest Group, Interfor, Mendocino Forest Products, Mt. Hood Forest Products, Neiman Enterprises, Ochoco Lumber, PotlatchDeltic, Sierra Pacific Industries, Stimson Lumber, Swanson Group, Thompson River Lumber, Vaagen Bros. Lumber, Western Forest Products and Yakama Forest Products.

Timber Processing magazine (Hatton-Brown Publishers, Inc.), promoting its upcoming Timber Processing & Energy Expo September 28-30 at the Portland Expo Center in Portland, Ore., was one of several companies to exhibit in the WWPA Exchange Show, along with AGS Stainless, BID Group, Biomass Engineering & Equipment, HALCO, Continental Underwriters, HUV International. MiCROTEC, Taylor Machine Works, USNR and Valutec.

Perhaps the biggest development to come out of the annual meeting was the introduction of “The Working Forest Initiative,” a well-funded data-driven campaign targeted at key influencers to drive measurable improvement in the favorability rating of the forest industry and thus positively resonate in wood products markets and the enhancement of the industry.

Adrian Blocker, recently retired as senior vice president of Timberlands and Wood Products at Weyerhaeuser, and well known through the years for his activism in numerous industry promotional groups, is leading the new initiative and addressed its early evolvement.

The initiative has hired Bully Pulpit Interactive, a public relations, message development and measurement firm based in Washington, DC and with several other offices in the U.S. Blocker said survey research conducted by BPI has showed that today the industry’s reputation is challenged. In fact a survey of Fortune 1000 business leaders, policymakers and activists revealed that only slightly more than a third “trust” the forest industry and describe the industry as forward-thinking, and only 25% believe the industry does the “right thing.”

The data showed the favorability of the forest industry lagging behind construction and agriculture, and only outperforming what is generally considered an extractive, energy intensive and polluting sector—mining.

Blocker said, unlike previous industry public relations campaigns that have been too broad, BPI’s research has finely-tuned the number of pivotal business, legislative, regulatory, media and other influencers on the forest industry to—not millions—but 639,000.

“For the first time as an industry we know who they are, how to target them with our messaging and we have research on what will change their minds and positions on our industry and issues,” Blocker said.

The initiative is starting out as a five-year campaign with $45 million in funding, including from producer companies such as West Fraser, Canfor, Sierra-Pacific Industries, Idaho Forest Group, Westervelt, Georgia-Pacific and Resolute, and with backing from several industry supporting groups and associations.

Part of the initiative is environmental awareness, to make sure that decision makers understand that harvesting is sustainable and working forests should be embraced as a tool to fight climate change, especially during this crucial period when frameworks, climate goals and policies to reduce carbon emissions are undertaken.

As to measuring the success of the initiative, Blocker said it will be measured quarterly based on familiarity and favorability of the industry, with the goal to double the forest industry’s favorability ratings in five years.

The Working Forest Initiative kicks off this fall as a 501c6 legal entity with a board of directors composed of funders who will provide governance and an advisory board of industry’s best communicators and government affairs professionals to help guide messaging efforts.

Other speakers during the meeting included Ali Wolf, chief economist with Zonda, and Mark Wishnie, chief sustainability officer and head of landscape capital at BTG Pactual Timberland Investment Group.

Latest News

U.S. Housing Starts Gain Momentum

U.S. housing starts picked up the pace in February, increasing 6.8% over January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.769 million, according to the U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development monthly new residential construction report…

Our Fathers And Their Children

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing March 2022 – My father-in-law, Dr. Woodward D. Lamar, best known as Woodie, died on Thursday morning, February 24, after a brief illness. He was, as the obituary stated, “99 years of ageless…

Drax Gets Satellite Pellet Plant Going

Drax Group is ramping up to full production at Leola—the first of three new satellite pellet plants it plans for Arkansas. Leola, in Grant County, is part of a $40 million investment by Drax in the state, creating approximately 30 new jobs across all the three sites planned for Arkansas as well as many more indirect jobs…

SFPA EXPO Plans Move To Nashville

The stage is set. 2023 will mark a new tour for the successful Forest Products Machinery & Equipment EXPO, bringing the show for the first time ever to Nashville, Tenn. and its Music City Center convention center located in the heart of downtown. The date is August 23-25, 2023…

Chunk Of Timberland Sold In U.S. South

Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board’s Tamarack Timberlands LLC, an investment vehicle owned by Ontario Teachers, has assumed ownership of 870,000 acres of timberland in the U.S. South from Resource Management Service (RMS). The large-scale timberland portfolio of high-quality loblolly pine is spread throughout the U.S. South and…

New Chinese Log Requirements

On December 20, 2021, the General Administration of Customs of the People’s Republic of China (GACC) released Decree 110. The Decree, entitled Quarantine Requirements on Pine Wood Imported from Countries with Occurrence of Pine Wood Nematodes is believed to generate more cost and probably new challenges to the U.S. export of logs and lumber to China…

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.