An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances

This dissertation describes the development of CAMBIUM, an agent-based forest sector model for large-scale strategic analysis. This model is designed as a decision support tool for assessing the effect that changes in forest product demand and resource inventories can have on the structure and econo...

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Main Author: Schwab, Olaf Sebastian
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2921
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-29212014-03-26T03:35:24Z An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances Schwab, Olaf Sebastian Agent-based modeling Forest sector modeling Decision support tool Mountain pine beetle Industry structure Salvage harvesting British Columbia Spruce weevil This dissertation describes the development of CAMBIUM, an agent-based forest sector model for large-scale strategic analysis. This model is designed as a decision support tool for assessing the effect that changes in forest product demand and resource inventories can have on the structure and economic viability of the forest sector. CAMBIUM complements existing forest sector models by modeling aggregate product supply as an emergent property of individual companies’ production decisions and stand-level ecological processes. Modeling the forest products sector as a group of interacting autonomous agents makes it possible to introduce production capacity dynamics and the potential for mill insolvencies as factors in modeling the effects of market and forest inventory based disturbances. This thesis contains four main manuscripts. In the first manuscript I develop and test a dispersal algorithm that projects aggregated forest inventory information onto a lattice grid. This method can be used to generate ecologically and statistically consistent datasets where high-quality spatial inventory data is otherwise unavailable. The second manuscript utilizes this dataset in developing a provincial-level resource dynamics model for assessing the timber supply effects of introducing weevil-resistant spruce. This model employs a stand-level approach to simulating weevil infestation and associated merchantable volume losses. Provincial-level impacts are determined by simulating harvest activities over a 350 year time horizon. In the third manuscript I shift the focus to interactions between forest companies. I analyze the effects of strategic decisions on sector structure by developing CAMBIUM as an agent-based model of competition and industry structure evolution. The forest sector is modeled as a group of autonomous, interacting agents that evolve and compete within the limitations posed by resource inventories and product demand. In the final manuscript I calibrate CAMBIUM to current conditions in the British Columbia forest sector. Industry agents compete for roundwood inputs, as well as for profits in finished product markets for pulp, panel products, and lumber. To test the relevance and utility of this model, CAMBIUM is used to quantify the cumulative impacts of a market downturn for forest products and mountain pine beetle induced timber supply fluctuations on the structure of the forest sector. 2008-12-16T18:42:48Z 2008-12-16T18:42:48Z 2008 2008-12-16T18:42:48Z 2009-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2921 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Agent-based modeling
Forest sector modeling
Decision support tool
Mountain pine beetle
Industry structure
Salvage harvesting
British Columbia
Spruce weevil
spellingShingle Agent-based modeling
Forest sector modeling
Decision support tool
Mountain pine beetle
Industry structure
Salvage harvesting
British Columbia
Spruce weevil
Schwab, Olaf Sebastian
An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
description This dissertation describes the development of CAMBIUM, an agent-based forest sector model for large-scale strategic analysis. This model is designed as a decision support tool for assessing the effect that changes in forest product demand and resource inventories can have on the structure and economic viability of the forest sector. CAMBIUM complements existing forest sector models by modeling aggregate product supply as an emergent property of individual companies’ production decisions and stand-level ecological processes. Modeling the forest products sector as a group of interacting autonomous agents makes it possible to introduce production capacity dynamics and the potential for mill insolvencies as factors in modeling the effects of market and forest inventory based disturbances. This thesis contains four main manuscripts. In the first manuscript I develop and test a dispersal algorithm that projects aggregated forest inventory information onto a lattice grid. This method can be used to generate ecologically and statistically consistent datasets where high-quality spatial inventory data is otherwise unavailable. The second manuscript utilizes this dataset in developing a provincial-level resource dynamics model for assessing the timber supply effects of introducing weevil-resistant spruce. This model employs a stand-level approach to simulating weevil infestation and associated merchantable volume losses. Provincial-level impacts are determined by simulating harvest activities over a 350 year time horizon. In the third manuscript I shift the focus to interactions between forest companies. I analyze the effects of strategic decisions on sector structure by developing CAMBIUM as an agent-based model of competition and industry structure evolution. The forest sector is modeled as a group of autonomous, interacting agents that evolve and compete within the limitations posed by resource inventories and product demand. In the final manuscript I calibrate CAMBIUM to current conditions in the British Columbia forest sector. Industry agents compete for roundwood inputs, as well as for profits in finished product markets for pulp, panel products, and lumber. To test the relevance and utility of this model, CAMBIUM is used to quantify the cumulative impacts of a market downturn for forest products and mountain pine beetle induced timber supply fluctuations on the structure of the forest sector.
author Schwab, Olaf Sebastian
author_facet Schwab, Olaf Sebastian
author_sort Schwab, Olaf Sebastian
title An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
title_short An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
title_full An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
title_fullStr An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
title_full_unstemmed An agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
title_sort agent-based forest sector modeling approach to analyzing the economic effects of natural disturbances
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2921
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