Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada

We compared the resilience to economic shocks - such as the downturn of the U.S. housing market - of commodity sawmills, which tend to be large, and value-added specialty sawmills, which tend to be small or medium in size, that are located in one region of the province of British Columbia, Canada, a...

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Main Authors: Evelyn W. Pinkerton, Jordan Benner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2013-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss2/art34/
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spelling doaj-eebe1bbd8633457b89baedae854797f32020-11-24T21:17:56ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872013-06-011823410.5751/ES-05515-1802345515Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, CanadaEvelyn W. Pinkerton0Jordan Benner1School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser UniversitySchool of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser UniversityWe compared the resilience to economic shocks - such as the downturn of the U.S. housing market - of commodity sawmills, which tend to be large, and value-added specialty sawmills, which tend to be small or medium in size, that are located in one region of the province of British Columbia, Canada, as measured by their average days in operation over the last decade and during the 2007-2009 recession. Using a combination of qualitative and quantitative measures, we then examined three behavioral characteristics contributing to their different degrees of resilience: flexibility, diversity, and orientation to place. We found that the specialty mills had greater resilience over the decade because they (a) contributed more jobs per volume of wood consumed and produced, (b) had greater flexibility to operate further below their capacity, (c) produced more diverse primary and secondary (value-added) wood products, (d) targeted more diverse markets, and (e) did more log sorting and trading in logs of different species with other specialty mills and with local commodity mills, with whom they acted as a resilient cluster. Although all these activities resulted in more logs flowing toward their highest value use, we found that the specialty mills lacked a secure and adequate timber supply, while the major timber tenures held by the commodity mills went largely unused during the downturn. This finding suggests that, in addition to contributing to resilience within the forest products sector, more access to timber tenure by the specialty mills, or having a greater portion of timber on the open market, would result in more value being produced from publicly owned timber.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss2/art34/British ColumbiaCanadacommodity sawmillsresilience of social-ecological systemsspecialty sawmillstimber supplyvalue-added wood products
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Evelyn W. Pinkerton
Jordan Benner
spellingShingle Evelyn W. Pinkerton
Jordan Benner
Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada
Ecology and Society
British Columbia
Canada
commodity sawmills
resilience of social-ecological systems
specialty sawmills
timber supply
value-added wood products
author_facet Evelyn W. Pinkerton
Jordan Benner
author_sort Evelyn W. Pinkerton
title Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada
title_short Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada
title_full Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada
title_fullStr Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Small Sawmills Persevere While the Majors Close: Evaluating Resilience and Desirable Timber Allocation in British Columbia, Canada
title_sort small sawmills persevere while the majors close: evaluating resilience and desirable timber allocation in british columbia, canada
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2013-06-01
description We compared the resilience to economic shocks - such as the downturn of the U.S. housing market - of commodity sawmills, which tend to be large, and value-added specialty sawmills, which tend to be small or medium in size, that are located in one region of the province of British Columbia, Canada, as measured by their average days in operation over the last decade and during the 2007-2009 recession. Using a combination of qualitative and quantitative measures, we then examined three behavioral characteristics contributing to their different degrees of resilience: flexibility, diversity, and orientation to place. We found that the specialty mills had greater resilience over the decade because they (a) contributed more jobs per volume of wood consumed and produced, (b) had greater flexibility to operate further below their capacity, (c) produced more diverse primary and secondary (value-added) wood products, (d) targeted more diverse markets, and (e) did more log sorting and trading in logs of different species with other specialty mills and with local commodity mills, with whom they acted as a resilient cluster. Although all these activities resulted in more logs flowing toward their highest value use, we found that the specialty mills lacked a secure and adequate timber supply, while the major timber tenures held by the commodity mills went largely unused during the downturn. This finding suggests that, in addition to contributing to resilience within the forest products sector, more access to timber tenure by the specialty mills, or having a greater portion of timber on the open market, would result in more value being produced from publicly owned timber.
topic British Columbia
Canada
commodity sawmills
resilience of social-ecological systems
specialty sawmills
timber supply
value-added wood products
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss2/art34/
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