Title: Changing Patterns in Forestland Ownership and Use
1Changing Patterns in Forestland Ownership and Use
- By
- Warren A. Flick
- Retired Person of Leisure
- and
- Thomas G. Harris, Jr.
- Professor of Forestry
- University of Georgia
Presented to the Second Butler/Cunningham
Conference on Agriculture and the Environment,
Trends and Opportunities for Rural Land Use,
November 3 and 4, 2003, Embassy Suites,
Montgomery, Alabama.
2Economic Context of Land Changes
- Rapidly growing wealth in the South (and U.S.) in
1990s, followed by the stock market collapse and
recession. - Recent changes were very rapidbetter
communications technology. Almost no one saw them
coming.
3The role of land is changing
- People used to own land to make a living. The
living (from land-based products agriculture and
timber) was typically modest, and land values
were low. - Now it seems, people make a living to own land.
We live well, push extra money back into the
land, and land values are up.
4Take a road trip.
- Tour around Atlanta and other large urban areas.
- Land appears well kept fences are mended, barns
and homes are spruced up, trash is at a minimum. - New homes abound.
- The old dilapidated buildings, run down fences,
and generally trashy look is getting harder and
harder to find near the cities.
5Some DataLand Values-1
- Retail v. Wholesale land values about 5,000
acres. - Retail (smaller tracts) values are typically
higher. - Retail land values (small tracts) are exceeding
1,000 per acre, and often rising to 3,000,
4,000 or more. (Source discussions with
realtors, newspaper ads in Alabama and Georgia)
6DataLand Values-2
Source Pulp and Paper North American Fact Book,
2002. San Francisco Paperloop.com, 2003.
7DataLand Values-3
8Recreation Participation Rates-1
Source Cordell, H. Ken, et. Outdoor Recreation
Participation Trends, 1999.
9Recreation Participation Rates-2
Source Cordell, H. Ken, et. Outdoor Recreation
Participation Trends. Chapter V, Cordell, H. Ken
Betz, Carter Bowker, J.M. and others. Outdoor
recreation in American life a national
assessment of demand and supply trends.
Champaign, IL Sagamore Publishing 219-321, 1999.
10Recreation-3
- There are more detailed data starting in surveys
from the 1980s, and the general picture is the
same - Personal trip in 1969 out west then again in
2003.
AN EXPLOSION IN RECREATIONAL USE OF LAND AND
WATER.
11Wildlife Data -1
- Wildlife conservation has grown vigorously in the
60 years from 1930 to 1990, and its been
successful. - U.S. Wild Turkey populations have increased
perhaps 20 to 30 times. - U.S. Whitetail Deer populations have increased
perhaps 10 times. - Perhaps 9 times for Elk, and perhaps 50 or more
times for Pronghorn.
Source MacCleery, Douglas W. American Forests,
a history of resiliency and recovery, 3rd
Printing. Durham, N.C. Forest History Society,
1994, p. 34.
12Wildlife Data -2
- The small game story is not so dramatically
positive. - Squirrel and Cottontail populations have been
roughly constant since 1975 in the South. - Bobwhite Quail and Grouse populations have been
declining since 1975, nationally and in the South.
Flather, Curtis H. Brady, Stephen J. Knowles,
Michael S. 1999. Wildlife resource trends in the
United States A technical document supporting
the 2000 RPA Assessment. Gen. Tech. Rep.
RMRS-GTR-33. Fort Collins, CO U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain
Research Station. 79 p.
13Wildlife Data -3
- From 1965 to 1995, duck populations have
increased through the 1970s, decreased through
the 1980s, and increased again through the 1990s,
both nationally and in the South. - Canada Goose populations have been generally
rising, though the picture is mixed depending on
the population.
Flather, Curtis H. Brady, Stephen J. Knowles,
Michael S. 1999. Wildlife resource trends in the
United States A technical document supporting
the 2000 RPA Assessment. Gen. Tech. Rep.
RMRS-GTR-33. Fort Collins, CO U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain
Research Station. 79 p.
14Wildlife-4
- Great success with some major game species.
- Opportunities exists especially with migratory
animals and with species of newer interest. - Its likely to be a major interest in the future,
of society and private landowners.
15Timber Data -1
- Look at AlabamaForest Service publishes
state-wide forest statistics. Latest inventory is
2000. - Timberland area is up 4.5 since 1990, to 22.9mm
acres, or 71 of the States land area. - Even in the face of substantial economic growth,
the area of forest grew significantly in a
10-year period.
Source Hartsell, Andrew J. and Mark J. Brown,
Forest Statistics for Alabama, 2000. Resource
Bulletin SRS-67. Asheville, NCUSFS Southern
Research Station, 2002.
16Timber Data-2
- Forest industry ownership is down to 3.74mm
acres, a 22 percent decline from about 4.8mm
acres in 1990. - NIPF ownership increased to 18.0mm acres (from
about 16mm acres). - Of the 18mm, 2.6mm owned by corporate NIPF.
- Of the 18mm, 15.4mm owned by individual NIPFs
- Not too much change in public ownership.
17Timber Data-3
- Alabamas timberland is about 46 hardwood
stands, and about 35 pine stands (abt 19
mixed). - Volume of softwood growing stock (commercial
trees) increased 9 between 1990 and 2000. - Volume of hardwood growing stock increased 17
between 1990 and 2000. - Softwood timber harvests increased 24 over the
previous 10-year period, and hardwood timber
harvests increased 10.
18Timber Data-4
- Summary the area of forest is up, weve been
growing more than were cutting, in hardwood and
pine, yet timber harvests were up substantially. - The forest is reasonably balanced between
hardwood, pine, and mixed. - And the forest is mostly (95) privately owned.
- Sounds really good to me! Congratulations,
Alabama!
19Contrast This
- The development of the lumber industry has
been so rapid and so recent that stumps of the
longleaf pines still stand in the main streets of
many of the towns. Many small mills are in
operation along with the large ones. The great
increase in the price of lumber in recent years
caused people to go lumber crazy along the new
lines of railroad. Whoever could buy a portable
mill and some timberland went in the lumber
business.
Foster, J.H. 1909. Preliminary Examination of the
Forest Conditions of Alabama. Typescript, file
1230.7.13, Kaul Lumber Company Records,
Birmingham Public Library, Birmingham, AL.
20And This
- Washington County now presents a great expanse
of cut-over land with no large towns and but few
scattered settlements. Like the counties of the
Lower Pine Belt, aside from a few farms, the
country was formerly a wilderness of forests,
with longleaf pine extending unbroken for miles.
Turpentining was the first industry and much of
the timber was boxed before lumbering began.
Lumbering followed, but many of the finest stands
of timber were already destroyed. The recent
extensive lumbering and turpentining have given
the country a desolate appearance.
21Summary
- Land values are up, especially of retail
timberland tracts. - Recreational use of forest land has been growing,
and the numbers bear it out. - Wildlife populations, at least those populations
traditionally associated with hunting, have been
increasing, but the picture is mixed for species
of smaller animals (and we dont have as much
historical data on smaller animals). - The forest itself, in Alabama, has been
increasing in area and volume. - It was much different 100 years ago, when the
lumbering boom was underway.
22Likely Future
23The role of land is changing
- People used to own land to make a living. The
living (from land-based products agriculture and
timber) was typically modest, and land values
were low. - Now it seems, people make a living to own land.
We live well, push extra money back into the
land, and land values are up.
24Old and New
- Old land values were based on the expectation of
future incomes from farming or timbering (BLV
100-400) - Old forestry culture was based on economics,
especially microeconomics.
- New land values are related to recreational and
wildlife uses of land. - New forestry culture is based on ideas like
sustainability, ecosystem management, and forest
health.
25Old and New-2
- Economics emphasizes outputs and revenues in
relation to costs . - Major resource issues are supply and demand.
- Appearance and condition of the land was not an
independent consideration.
- New views focus on the condition of the forest.
- Appearance and composition are critical.
- Supply-Demand analysis isnt as relevant.
- Look at the Forest Services SFRA.
26Market Dynamics
- Industry selling land in Alabama and elsewhere.
- Unprecedented levels of timberland sales between
1995 and 2000 totaled 11.3 billion and involved
15 million acres (PP NA Fact Book, 2002,
pp.62-63). - RISI (Resource Information Systems, Inc.) 13.3 mm
acres of sales from 2000 through first 3 Qs of
2003. - In 2002, an industry newsletter lists over 3mm
acres of sales (Timberland Markets). Same year,
RISI estimates 3.2mm acres sold. - So far in 2003, an estimated 6mm acres are in
play. (Timberland Markets). RISI estimates 2.3mm
already sold.
27Land Sale Summary
- Total sales since 1995 About 27.8mm acres.
- U.S. Timberland Holdings, major companies, 2001
About 45mm acres. - U.S.F.S. in 2000 RPA estimates industrial
timberland ownership 66mm acres. - Conclusion ownership is changing fast, and a
significant part of industrial ownership is
involved.
28Why is industry selling land?
- Weve learned that timber and land markets work
(now a surplus). - Increasing global competition in timber growing,
manufacturing, and marketing. - Environmental and regulatory pressure is raising
costs of land management in the U.S.. - U.S. Tax lawsincome and propertydiscriminate
against corporate ownership. (double tax, no
capital gains, increasing property tax pressure)
29Categories of landownersthe players
- Forest Industry (own land and manufacturing
facilities) - Private individuals and groups, including farmers
- Publiclocal, state, federal
- TIMOs (Timberland Investment Management
Organizations)
30TIMOS
- The TIMOs will hold land for a short period of
time (perhaps 10-15 years), then retail it out to
private owners or sell it to other TIMOs,
government or conservation groups. - Their interest is financial they arent making
investments in forest research (they are using
the existing store of knowledge developed largely
by industry and some university research).
31TIMOS-more
- They are required by law to attend strictly to
the financial interests of their clients. - They have no investment in manufacturing and
little commitment to local communities. - Therefore, if the economics of timberland
ownership (returns to timber growing and
ownership) begin to cloud up, pension funds may
reduce their interest in this asset.
32Timber PricesHypothesis
- Industrial ownership is declining
(dramatically?), but overall timber supply is
increasing. - Mills are closing in the U.S. Between 1989 and
2002, 63 wood-using pulp mills closed in the
U.S., and 22 of them were in the South.
33Timber PricesHypothesis
- From the mid 1970s (and before also), through the
1980s, the news in the trade journals was about
mill openings and expansionspulp and paper as
well as wood products. - In the 1990s, the news gradually turned to mill
closures and timberland divestments.
Timber Processing, Nov. 1998, Start it Up, pp.
27-31, traces much of the news.
34Timber PricesHypothesis
- These market dynamics were reviewing point to
downward pressure on timber prices demand is
down, monopsony is increasing, and timber supply
is up. - And globalization is increasing competition on
all fronts timber growing, manufacturing, and
marketing.
35TIMOS-yet more
- In our perception, TIMOs are increasingly likely
to rely on increases in land values to generate
positive returns. - That tends to increase the speculative element in
forestland investments, which may reduce pension
fund involvement. It isnt clear that rural land
speculation is a prudent investment. - Is their long-term future bright? We are
skeptical. At least one pension fund has recently
decided against forestry.
36Private Landowners Role
- What will that role be in the South? Our view
paramount. - In the last year and a half, about 77 of the
acres of timberland transactions have been in the
East and South. (Timberland Markets, 1(4)4
(August 2003). - Tax efficient (income, property, and perhaps
estate).
37Private Landowners Role
- There is substantial public support direct
subsidies and public extension activity. - Only ownership category ready to absorb and
reflect our changing social interest toward
recreation and wildlifeflexible. - Often involved with local community.
- Deemed socially healthy, like the family farmer.
38Related Points
- Forest Landowner 34th Manual Edition, March/April
2003, documents the costs of forestry practices.
Land management practices. - During the 1980s through early 1990s, there is a
mixed pattern of costs in relation to wholesale
southern pine lumber prices. - From mid to late 1990s, with the run-up in lumber
prices, costs lagged way behind.
39Related Points
- But since the late 1990s, wholesale lumber prices
have declined, and forestry costs have
skyrocketed. - Timber culture, by itself, is getting harder to
justify, and landowners with money and a variety
of interests are in the best position to do it.
40Related Points
- Regarding timberland, the industry has learned
that timber markets work. It doesnt need to own
land. - Intensive forestry is reducing the need for
industrial timberland. - The industry is not likely to again become a net
buyer of timberland.
41Related Points
- Regarding manufacturing, the closing of U.S.
facilities is consistent with long-term patterns
of economic development in which regions tend to
move from extractive industries through
manufacturing and into service and information
industries. - Manufacturing capacity is not likely to grow much
in the South.
42Summary
- Land values are up, new owners are moving in, the
rural landscape is sprucing up, and there is a
growing interest in recreation and wildlife. - Forest industry landownership is declining.
- TIMOs have grown vigorously in the past 10 years,
but were not sure this is a long-term trend. - The economic prospects for timber growing seem to
be declining at the margin, and these declines do
seem to be long-term.
43Conclusion-1
- Were talking about the margins of activity,
about the character of growth and change.
Traditional elements of forestry will be here for
years to come. - Without going into detail, let me say that both
of us have sometimes been wrong. We believe what
were saying today, but we know the future will
unfold without regard to what were saying today. - Nevertheless
44Conclusion-2
- In the East, there is an enormous entrepreneurial
opportunity to serve landowners interested in
recreation and wildlife. - New owners have money and are accustomed to
paying for service. - We may be headed into an age of unbridled
multiple-use forestry, and in the South it will
be mostly on private land.