Abstract

Strategic, tactical, and operation-level forest management plans are commonly formulated by forest planners following even-flow yield principles. Although strategic planning ensures a sustained supply of timber over the long term, it disregards individual mills’ requirements, which leads to discrepancy between supply and demand. We hypothesize that a value-based timber allocation decision, which accounts for individual mills’ demands during tactical level planning, reduces such discrepancy by increasing value over the entire supply chain. Three types of linear programming models were constructed: Model A—status quo volume-maximization model, Model B—supply chain net present value-maximization (NPV) model, and Model C—a novel approach with sub-models embedded that maximize the NPV of individual mills in the allocation decision. Our results showed that only 58% of the annual allowable cut was profitable and the mean net revenue per harvested area was $2455 ha−1 using Model A. The respective values using Models B and C were 64% and $3890 ha−1 and 96% and $4040 ha−1, respectively, showing that Model C generated the highest net revenue for all mills. Such a method of value-based sequential optimization (Model C) will be crucial in sustainable use of forest products and sustaining future bioeconomy, particularly for managing mixed species stands that contain timber suitable for manufacturing a wide range of products with different market values.

Highlights

  • Forest management planning outlines a set of activities to be employed to meet landowner objectives over a long-term planning horizon [1]

  • We further disaggregated the total timber disbursement to each wood mill category corresponding to each product type based on the product recovery proportion

  • The net revenue generated by the harvest prescriptions using Model A was negative for some products

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Summary

Introduction

Forest management planning outlines a set of activities to be employed to meet landowner objectives over a long-term planning horizon [1]. A third model form, named Model III or network flow model [4,5], is used in forest planning. These models are formulated to achieve sustained harvest flow and sustainability of forest ecosystems [6]. Strategic planning focuses on providing a sustained yield of timber considering the vulnerability of risk to landscape, forest ecosystem, and biodiversity. As such, it intends to maximize annual allowable cut (AAC) of merchantable timber volume abiding by sustained yield (volume) principles [6]. Operational-level plans outline harvesting activities such as felling, bucking, transportation, road construction, and other silvicultural activities [11,12]

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