Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change

Finnish-based forest corporation, Stora Enso, is developing and purchasing eucalypt plantations, and establishing a large pulp mill with an approximate production capacity of 1 million tonnes of pulp per year in southern China. The project has been evaluated by recognised international assessment, w...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mery, G., Katila, P., Galloway, G., Alfaro, R.I., Kanninen, M., Lobovikov, M., Varjo, J.
Formato: Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: IUFRO 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20521
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author Mery, G.
Katila, P.
Galloway, G.
Alfaro, R.I.
Kanninen, M.
Lobovikov, M.
Varjo, J.
author_browse Alfaro, R.I.
Galloway, G.
Kanninen, M.
Katila, P.
Lobovikov, M.
Mery, G.
Varjo, J.
author_facet Mery, G.
Katila, P.
Galloway, G.
Alfaro, R.I.
Kanninen, M.
Lobovikov, M.
Varjo, J.
author_sort Mery, G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Finnish-based forest corporation, Stora Enso, is developing and purchasing eucalypt plantations, and establishing a large pulp mill with an approximate production capacity of 1 million tonnes of pulp per year in southern China. The project has been evaluated by recognised international assessment, which concluded that it would be profitable and environmentally and socially sustainable. Wood supply from existing and new plantations was assessed to be sufficient to meet the need of the pulp mill. The conclusions on wood supply were based on very simple estimates and risky assumptions on mean annual increment (MAI) and areas of plantation estate available without fully taking into account many high-risk factors, or at least data are not available in the public domain. This paper discusses several elements that have an effect on sustainability of wood supply, including factors and risks affecting wood production and land availability. The results demonstrate a close relationship between wood production of the plantation itself, and the total area needed to produce a certain amount of wood. At the scale of the case study involved, every 10% change in MAI is equivalent to about 5000 to 40 000 ha of land, depending on growth rates. We show that many new fast-growing eucalypt plantations, in addition to existing ones, are needed for long-term sustainability of wood supply. Moreover, substantial investments in strategic and applied research would be required to achieve high and sustainable production per unit area in the given environment. This means that more actions will be required in the establishment and management of new plantations. The results from the wood supply scenario also reveal the growing importance of corporate responsibility (CR) in the corporate governance agenda of the forest sector. In order to achieve the desired economic, environmental, and social outcomes, national macro-economic planning, a consistent policy and management framework, and a systematic, focused and institutionalised approach to CR are therefore expected from the government and the private sector, respectively
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spelling CGSpace205212025-01-24T14:13:04Z Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change Mery, G. Katila, P. Galloway, G. Alfaro, R.I. Kanninen, M. Lobovikov, M. Varjo, J. forestry research Finnish-based forest corporation, Stora Enso, is developing and purchasing eucalypt plantations, and establishing a large pulp mill with an approximate production capacity of 1 million tonnes of pulp per year in southern China. The project has been evaluated by recognised international assessment, which concluded that it would be profitable and environmentally and socially sustainable. Wood supply from existing and new plantations was assessed to be sufficient to meet the need of the pulp mill. The conclusions on wood supply were based on very simple estimates and risky assumptions on mean annual increment (MAI) and areas of plantation estate available without fully taking into account many high-risk factors, or at least data are not available in the public domain. This paper discusses several elements that have an effect on sustainability of wood supply, including factors and risks affecting wood production and land availability. The results demonstrate a close relationship between wood production of the plantation itself, and the total area needed to produce a certain amount of wood. At the scale of the case study involved, every 10% change in MAI is equivalent to about 5000 to 40 000 ha of land, depending on growth rates. We show that many new fast-growing eucalypt plantations, in addition to existing ones, are needed for long-term sustainability of wood supply. Moreover, substantial investments in strategic and applied research would be required to achieve high and sustainable production per unit area in the given environment. This means that more actions will be required in the establishment and management of new plantations. The results from the wood supply scenario also reveal the growing importance of corporate responsibility (CR) in the corporate governance agenda of the forest sector. In order to achieve the desired economic, environmental, and social outcomes, national macro-economic planning, a consistent policy and management framework, and a systematic, focused and institutionalised approach to CR are therefore expected from the government and the private sector, respectively 2010 2012-06-04T09:13:26Z 2012-06-04T09:13:26Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20521 en IUFRO Mery, G., Katila, P., Galloway, G., Alfaro, R.I., Kanninen, M., Lobovikov, M., Varjo, J. 2010. Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change . Vienna, Austria, IUFRO. 509p ISBN: 978-3-901347-93-1..
spellingShingle forestry
research
Mery, G.
Katila, P.
Galloway, G.
Alfaro, R.I.
Kanninen, M.
Lobovikov, M.
Varjo, J.
Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change
title Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change
title_full Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change
title_fullStr Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change
title_full_unstemmed Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change
title_short Forests and society - responding to global drivers of change
title_sort forests and society responding to global drivers of change
topic forestry
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20521
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AT katilap forestsandsocietyrespondingtoglobaldriversofchange
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AT alfarori forestsandsocietyrespondingtoglobaldriversofchange
AT kanninenm forestsandsocietyrespondingtoglobaldriversofchange
AT lobovikovm forestsandsocietyrespondingtoglobaldriversofchange
AT varjoj forestsandsocietyrespondingtoglobaldriversofchange