Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee

The purpose of this paper is to assess the delivered cost of pulpwood from natural hardwood stands in the State of Tennessee using forest operations supply chain analysis. The study is based on primary production and equipment data collected from logging firms using a statewide in-depth harvesting a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Donald Hodges, Johnny Heard, Dalia Abbas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb, Faculty of Forestry 2019-01-01
Series:Croatian Journal of Forest Engineering
Online Access:https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/317249
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spelling doaj-4477b0bc3f224902a3a720f3a2369b052020-11-25T02:36:26ZengUniversity of Zagreb, Faculty of ForestryCroatian Journal of Forest Engineering1845-57191848-96722019-01-014014954217395Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in TennesseeDonald Hodges0Johnny Heard1Dalia Abbas2The University of Tennessee Department of Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries Knoxville, TN USACollinwood, TN USAThe University of Tennessee Department of Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries Knoxville, TN USAThe purpose of this paper is to assess the delivered cost of pulpwood from natural hardwood stands in the State of Tennessee using forest operations supply chain analysis. The study is based on primary production and equipment data collected from logging firms using a statewide in-depth harvesting and transportation survey. Survey results were used to develop estimates for the delivery cost of hardwood pulpwood removed per green tonne unit hour. Findings revealed not only the variability of inputs attached to costing harvesting operations, but also the difficulty in identifying one typical harvest system for the state. This may be explained by the very diverse operating conditions and systems, as well as the low stumpage prices and high cost of harvesting and delivery that are predominantly managed by small scale operations. Results have shown that the cost of harvesting a tonne of wood for a distance of up to 50 km ranges from an average minimum of $43 per tonne to an average maximum of $51 per tonne. After this distance, the cost increases exponentially. The fact that this study is the first for the state that looks at the operations logistics indicates the lack of available knowledge of the true cost incurred by operators that may have a lasting impact not only on the continuity of logging operations but also the sustainability and availability of forest products and workforce.https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/317249
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donald Hodges
Johnny Heard
Dalia Abbas
spellingShingle Donald Hodges
Johnny Heard
Dalia Abbas
Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee
Croatian Journal of Forest Engineering
author_facet Donald Hodges
Johnny Heard
Dalia Abbas
author_sort Donald Hodges
title Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee
title_short Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee
title_full Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee
title_fullStr Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee
title_full_unstemmed Costing the Forest Operations and the Supply of Hardwood in Tennessee
title_sort costing the forest operations and the supply of hardwood in tennessee
publisher University of Zagreb, Faculty of Forestry
series Croatian Journal of Forest Engineering
issn 1845-5719
1848-9672
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The purpose of this paper is to assess the delivered cost of pulpwood from natural hardwood stands in the State of Tennessee using forest operations supply chain analysis. The study is based on primary production and equipment data collected from logging firms using a statewide in-depth harvesting and transportation survey. Survey results were used to develop estimates for the delivery cost of hardwood pulpwood removed per green tonne unit hour. Findings revealed not only the variability of inputs attached to costing harvesting operations, but also the difficulty in identifying one typical harvest system for the state. This may be explained by the very diverse operating conditions and systems, as well as the low stumpage prices and high cost of harvesting and delivery that are predominantly managed by small scale operations. Results have shown that the cost of harvesting a tonne of wood for a distance of up to 50 km ranges from an average minimum of $43 per tonne to an average maximum of $51 per tonne. After this distance, the cost increases exponentially. The fact that this study is the first for the state that looks at the operations logistics indicates the lack of available knowledge of the true cost incurred by operators that may have a lasting impact not only on the continuity of logging operations but also the sustainability and availability of forest products and workforce.
url https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/317249
work_keys_str_mv AT donaldhodges costingtheforestoperationsandthesupplyofhardwoodintennessee
AT johnnyheard costingtheforestoperationsandthesupplyofhardwoodintennessee
AT daliaabbas costingtheforestoperationsandthesupplyofhardwoodintennessee
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