Western Austrralia's plantation timber industry ( which we should all support ) is failing. It can't compete with the bargain basement prices of our last remaining native hardwoods . Our government sees votes in "jobs for the boys" in sawmills. O
utlandishly generous timber amounts were promised to millworkers in my town of Nannup by Terry Redman MP before the last state election. Logging took place last year in vast areas which had been preserved by all governments since 1920 as high conservation value. This year logging is to continue all winter. Jarrah is a fantastically good fire wood (millable logs are currently burnt in the Alcoa smelter at Wagerup thanks to Minister Redman's pricing of just $5 a cubic meter, less than blue gum plantation waste which was planned to fuel the smelter.
Couldn't mill workers be employed planting spotted gum and other species of fast growing structural timber, on cleared land?
These mills will inevitably have to close as we've cut down nearly all the native timber that was here when white man arrived 200 years ago. Jarrah seedlings take about 300 years to grow .Like Karri, vast amounts of Jarrah was cut down and shipped out all over the world from the early 1900's. But in the early days this was done manually, didn't destroy the understory and employed a lot of people. Nowadays it is mostly done by machine, flattens everything, spreads disease and the Forest Products Commission runs at a financial loss! The government logs large areas then kindly turns them into " National Parks " so that they can boast about the area they have reserved. They know there is nothing left of economic value in these so called National Parks for the next 300 years!
Jarrah is nearly all gone, and along with it, world heritage ecosystems and biodiversity. The Black cockatoos pictured below are critically endangered. These individulas are being rehabilitated at David and Dee Pattersons sanctuary in Nannup. They were found emaciated and starving to death because ...these birds need to eat the seeds from 100 Jarrah or 50 Marri gum nuts a day.
A Scientists' Statement on the Protection of Western
Australia's South-West Forests was
launched last week.
You can
download a copy of the statement
and access the
YouTube clips here. There was some good media coverage, including an
article in the West. We are hopeful that the strong statement
made by so many eminent scientists, many of whom are experts in their fields,
has been heard and that their recommendations will be acted upon.
The
Auditor General's report into the supply and sale of our native
forest timber was tabled in Parliament today. The report confirms that our
forests are being mismanaged and that waste and environmental breaches are being
overlooked by the Government's logging industry. WAFA has put out a
media release and will follow up with a more rigorous response
to the report in the coming days.
Forest Legacy hosted a very successful
and inspiring forest tour last weekend. Congratulations to Patrick Weir, Maggie
Burke, Jo MacDonald and the team. You can find Forest Legacy on Facebook and on
their website.
If you'd
like to get involved in the WA Forest Alliance who do tireless work to save our precious biodiversity contact Jessica Chapman on 0457 441 102 or
jessicachapman@hotmail.com
The EPA will be releasing their report and
recommendations on the next 10-year Forest Management Plan in a few weeks time.
There will be an important opportunity to put in appeals. Phone
Jess Beckerling WA Forest Alliance 0488 777
592
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