Maines View of the Softwood Lumber Trade Dispute - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Maines View of the Softwood Lumber Trade Dispute

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Lumber Trade Dispute. Lloyd C. Irland. The Irland Group and. Yale University. 8/11/09 ... Irland: MSU Canada Lumber Trade Conference. 5 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Maines View of the Softwood Lumber Trade Dispute


1
Maines View of the SoftwoodLumber Trade Dispute
  • Lloyd C. Irland
  • The Irland Group and
  • Yale University

2
Contents
  • Geography
  • Cross border flows of workers
  • Production trends
  • Resource situation
  • Border mills cross border flows of logs
  • Investment flows of Capital
  • Summary Whats unusual about Maine

3
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4
Cant find Internat. Border on this map! (Domtar)
5
An industry and a society divided by an arbitrary
line
Source Irland, 2000.
6
Maines Empty Quarter
Cross border flow of workers slows to a Trickle,
50s to late 90s
7
Production Trends
  • ME SWL production
  • Revived after the 60s
  • Slipped after 2000
  • Rank in SWL 13 in 2002
  • Integration w. paper industry
  • Region one of culture hearths of paper industry
  • Once time an advantage, Now not so clear
  • Canadian capital sustains significant part of
    Paper industry

8
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9
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10
Resource Situation
  • Major plunge in spruce fir inventory
  • Budworm, rising harvest pressure maturity
  • By early 90s most of the large wood gone
  • Now ME in competition with Canadian small wood
    regions huge spaghetti mills
  • Species Mix -- chart.
  • Sawmills sustained by
  • Smaller wood
  • Bidding wood away from pulp mills

11
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12
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13
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14
Source MFS, Wood Processor Report, 1993.
15
Who owns the land
  • Industry major owner till turn of century
  • 8 of US total!
  • Total Owned by US Pub. Held Industrial Corps
    0.
  • PCT 950,000 /-
  • 3-4 MMA held by Canadian entities
  • Public ownership below 10
  • Easements mixed ownership
  • 10 of state by end 2003

16
Quebec Border Mills
  • Small forest resource So. of St. Lawrence
  • Little Crown or freehold industrial land
  • Often built by logging contractors
  • Long hauls to Ti too costly by 60s
  • Rebuilt spruce market in the East
  • Accomodated push to salvage budworm wood
  • Small log technology chip markets
  • Longterm relationships
  • Some have bought land in ME

17
Export Percent 70s 40 2003 36 Higher in N.
Counties
18
Border mills
  • Hedged against exchange rate fluctuations
  • More dependent on US market than 15 yrs ago
  • Since they run on ME wood, not affected very much
    by Crown policies/prices
  • Most exempt from duties/quotas, wholesale or mill
    by mill.

19
Effects of border log trade
  • On sawmills
  • Higher log costs
  • Extreme competition for wood
  • Competition for residuals
  • Effect on market side actually small
  • On landowners
  • Better prices for stumpage
  • More competition
  • Shorter hauls to mill
  • Better utilization t/l, small tops

20
Crossborder Investment
  • Maine is importing Canadian Capital
  • Canadian owned sawmills in ME
  • Even as US Giants selling their land, closing
    mills
  • Canadian capital sustains major paper mills (and
    chip markets for sawmills)
  • Canadian landownership substantial
  • Largest private owner JDI Ltd of New Brunswick

21
List of Grievances
  • Trucking regulations weights
  • Log exports
  • (mis) characterized as Exporting jobs
  • Sending product to our customers
  • Misuse of SPF N label on Me wood
  • Woods Labor coming into state
  • health care all those goodies
  • Generalized resentment of ownership from away

22
Emerging competition late 90s
  • White pine
  • Radiata end products
  • Blocks
  • Lumber
  • Have annexed major share in end use markets
  • Framing
  • European suppliers

23
Offshore imports 2002 2 X compared to Maine
production
24
Import Unit Values
  • per cubic meter, 2003
  • Canada 100
  • Germany 166
  • Brazil 192
  • NZ 308
  • Finland 210
  • Source FAS website.

25
Summary Whats different about Maine
  • Crossborder ownership of land/mills
  • Communities sustained by Canadian capital
  • Land almost entirely private
  • Workers cross border ... In both directions
  • High level of sawlog exports complex web of
    wood/chip flows

26
Summary
  • Extreme fiber supply tightness
  • Single economy and society divided by an
    arbitrary line
  • So Maines political view of this trade
    conflict flows from an incredibly complex
  • Web of interconnections.
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