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THE SOUTH’S FORESTPRODUCTS INDUSTRY of the FUTURE
LUMBER-VENEER-POLESCOMPOSITE PRODUCTSPULP AND PAPERENERGYBIO-CHEMICALS
THE GLOBAL ECONOMY BRINGS NEW CHALLENGES TO THE FOREST PRODUCTS INDUSTRY.
HOW WILL WE DEAL WITH THEM?
Humanity’s Top Ten Problemsfor next 50 years* 1. ENERGY2. WATER3. FOOD4. ENVIRONMENT 5. POVERTY6. TERRORISM &
WAR7. DISEASE8. EDUCATION9. DEMOCRACY10. POPULATION
2003 6.5 Billion People2050 8-10 Billion People
*Taken form Dr. Smalley, Rice University
U.S. Dependence on Foreign Oil
Saudi Arabia 26%Iraq 11%Kuwait 10%Iran 9%UAE 8%Venezuela 6%Russia 5%Libya 3%Mexico 3%China 3%Nigeria 2%U.S. 2%
U.S. 26%Japan 7%China 6%Germany 4%Canada 4%Russia 3%Brazil 3%S. Korea 3%France 3%India 3%Mexico 3%Italy 2%
Have OilHave Oil Use OilUse Oil
The U.S. uses more than the next 5 highestconsuming nations combined.
The U.S. uses more than the next 5 highestconsuming nations combined.
Updated March 2003. Source: International Energy Annual 2001 (EIA), Tables 11.4 and 11.10.
ENERGY SHORTAGE – OUR OPPORTUNITY Current worldwide demand for oil
81MM barrels/day Production at 95% capacity
Demand in 20 years 121MM barrels/day
Where will it come from? Unstable countries and alternative sources Source balance will change over time
Natural gas Shortage in 10 years Price high and climbing- up 17% last week
THE WOOD ENERGY andBIO-CHEMICALS MARKET
High volume Non-cyclical Primarily small diameter planted pine Manage forests to include new uses Success will put more acres in trees Failure will take acres out of trees
THE TIMBER RESOURCE Abundant Renewable, Sustainable, Expandable Grow pine trees faster and bigger Harvesting capacity in place and under-
utilized Growing and harvesting more trees
improves the environment Long history of success
TREES CAN BE USED FOR ENERGY AND BIO-CHEMICALS Co-fire with coal
Should be our first priority Proven at up to 10% mix, sawdust size
Georgia utilities use about 30MM tons/yr. Utilities have little incentive to include wood
250 year coal supply, relatively cheap - PRB We need to help with legislation to provide financial
incentive for utilities to use wood as fuel Convert to bio-oil
More dense (higher BTU/lb) MS State got $1.4MM grant – wood preservative
Gasify High capital cost
THE SOUTHERN ALLIANCE FOR THE UTILIZATION OF
BIOMASS RESOURCES(SAUBR)
A Partnership for Rural Development Through the Production of Energy and
Chemicals from Forests and Farms in the Southern United States
Purpose of the Alliance Create a new industry which will use
bio-mass as an energy and chemicals feedstock – new high volume, non-cyclical USES for forest and farm crops – TREES Small diameter trees Logging residue(Limbs, tops, un-merchantable)
Stimulate rural development Restore jobs lost Create new jobs, in the woods and in plants
Decrease dependence on fossil fuels
Why an Alliance is necessary
Conventional market forces too slow and currently in the wrong direction
Get our arms around “IT” Put the pieces together Need combined effort for political power
and efficiency Quicker COMMERCIALIZATION
What SAUBR Will Do
Combine strengths and resources of members
Assist in legislative process Is a center for communications, co-
operation, collaborationConduit for information exchangeEliminate duplicationJoint projects by members
Current Members The Alabama Forestry Association The South Carolina Forestry Commission The Georgia Forestry Commission The Alabama Forestry Commission The Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries The Alabama Department of Economic & Community Affairs (ADECA) The Alabama Development Office (ADO) Auburn University Department of Agronomy and Soils Auburn University Forest Products Development Center Forest Energy Associates Forest Investment Associates The Gas Technology Institute Mississippi State University Department of Forest Products The South Carolina Forestry Association The South Carolina Department of Commerce The Sugar Processing Research Institute The University of Alabama Center for Economic Development The University of Alabama at Huntsville Alabama Technology Network The University of Alabama Institute for Manufacturing Excellence The University of Georgia Faculty of Engineering
Current Members - continued Green Energy Technologies The Texas Forestry Association The University of Georgia Warnell School of Forest Resources Vinyard Technology Company, Inc. The Alabama Treasure Forest Association Jasper Lumber Company Alliance Biomass Energy Forestry Unlimited Earth Resources Farley Forest Products Taylor-Made Transportation Timberland Harvesters, Inc. Southeastern Lumber Manufacturers Association Cooper T. Smith Timberlands Miller and Company B.A.S. Timber Company The Forest Landowners Association Power Generating, Inc U.S. Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory General Bio-Energy, Inc. Renewable Oil International, LLC
Current Members - continued Forest Resource Consultants, Inc The Mississippi Forestry Association Eprida Mississippi Alternative Energy Enterprise Santee Cooper Southern Region Extension Forestry Stuckey Timberlands, Inc. Southern U.S. Timber Properties, Inc. Mainstream Business Enterprises, LLC Fulghum FibreFuels, LTD Sterling Planet The Mississippi Biomass Council Southern Company Crain Consulting The University of Alabama Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering
US Forest Service, Southern Research Station University of Tennessee
Leadership Chair – Dr. Liam Leightley, MS State Chair Elect – Mr. Gene Quick, Forest Energy
Associates Secretary – Mr. Freddy Thompson, Jasper
Lumber Company Treasurer, Dr. Scott Spear, Univ. of AL 12 Other Directors
Dr. Dale Threadgill, UGA Faculty of Eng. Fred Allen
Home Base
University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa Alabama Institute for Manufacturing
Excellence(AIME) We owe these people!!
Mode of Operation Not-for-profit(501)(c)(3). UA Capstone Fnd. Maximum effectiveness and efficiency Cost - $200-250M/year for South
With free internal support
Enormous return for taxpayers’ investment Georgia pulpwood, 1999 – 21MM tons South’s pulpwood, 1999 – 135.9MM tons Stumpage price up $0.10/ton, payback is:
- $2.1MM in Georgia, $13.9MM in South
Not a long-term organization ~10 yrs.
Working Groups Legislative Education Public Education/Outreach Technology/Technology Transfer Research Funding Policy Economic/Rural Development Forest Related Industry Agriculture Related Industry Membership
What’s Next? SAUBR now formed – must deliver PUT CONVERSION PLANT IN PLACE Develop and implement Strategic Plan
Well coordinated Southern regional political strategy is first priority
Build congressional, state and local support Get operational funding - $200-250M/yr. Need part-time Director First Conference – October 25-26, 2004 Joint (SFRP) Conference – August, 2005 Spread the word, add votes
WHAT SHOULD WE DO?
Have “industry summit” meeting(s) Areas within Georgia? State Regional(Southeastern US) Build support
Be active in SAUBR Working Groups Sub-group in Georgia
Let industry associations work for us First results will be politically driven
Your Thoughts?
Need your thoughts and suggestions Please give me a note
Whatever we do – Must do it ourselves Must speed up the change process YOU CAN HELP!!