Puttock, D.; Richardsson, J.
Finnish Forest Research Inst., Helsinki (Finland)1998
Finnish Forest Research Inst., Helsinki (Finland)1998
AbstractAbstract
[en] Activities 1.2 (Forest management) and 1.2 (Harvesting) of Task XII/IEA Bioenergy Agreement carried out an international review of wood fuel from plantation cleaning and early thinning. The participating countries were Canada, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden and the United Kingdom. The individual country reviews and an international summary are presented in this paper. Each report gives country-related background information on forestry and wood utilization, energy potential from plantation cleaning and early thinning, environmental considerations from the viewpoint of wood fuel recovery, silvicultural systems and methods, cost of wood fuel, and knowledge gaps and problems
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1998; 72 p; ISBN 951-40-1600-9;
; Available from Finnish Forest Research Institute Metla, Library, P.O.Box 18, FIN-01301 Vantaa, Finland; Activities 1.1 and 1.2/Task XII/IEA Bioenergy

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[en] Precommercial thinning and plantation cleaning offer opportunities for increasing the availability of wood fuel in Canada. In 1992, approximately 130 000 ha were treated with precommercial thinning or stand cleaning. Manual methods predominate in these silvicultural activities; however, at stand densities greater than 10 000 - 15 000 stems/ha, mechanized systems are more economical. Recovering this biomass for wood fuel would require changes to silvicultural systems and harvesting technology
Primary Subject
Source
Puttock, D.; Richardsson, J. (eds.); Finnish Forest Research Inst., Helsinki (Finland); 72 p; ISBN 951-40-1600-9;
; 1998; p. 11-22; Available from Finnish Forest Research Institute Metla, Library, P.O.Box 18, FIN-01301 Vantaa, Finland

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[en] This paper summaries the results of an international of wood fuel from early thinning and plantation cleaning. The economic and biological benefits from early thinning have been well documented. However, removing forest biomass during early stages of stand development from sites which are low in one or more nutrients may contribute a loss of nutrients and organic matter. Depending on the pre-thinning density and the thinning intensity, the potential yield of wood fuel from early thinning may be as much as 79 dry tons per hectare. Thus, wood fuel from the thinnings could be an important source of revenue to forest owners and would contribute to domestic energy requirements. Motor-manual felling predominates in early thinning, mainly due to the lack of appropriate technology for thinning small trees. However, the productivity of motor-manual felling is greatly affected by the initial stand density and declines dramatically at densities greater than 10 000 stems per ha. Under these conditions, purpose-built wood fuel harvesters with small-tree harvesting capability offer the greatest potential for increasing felling productivity and reducing the cost of wood fuel. The cost of wood fuel from early thinnings varies widely between countries from USD 25.00 - 87.50 per dry ton depending on stand conditions, harvesting system, transport distance, domestic tax rates, and stumpage prices. At the low end of this range, wood fuel chips from early thinning are competitive with wood fuel produced from mill waste, the residues from clearfell operations, or from later thinnings
Primary Subject
Source
Puttock, D.; Richardsson, J. (eds.); Finnish Forest Research Inst., Helsinki (Finland); 72 p; ISBN 951-40-1600-9;
; 1998; p. 7-10; Available from Finnish Forest Research Institute Metla, Library, P.O.Box 18, FIN-01301 Vantaa, Finland

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