Synopses & Reviews
Long-range models that include product and resource detail are essential to meaningful analysis of both industry and resource sustainability. Taking this as it's central argument, this book provides essential reading to anyone interested in projecting the future of either the forest products market and/or the forest resource conditions. It is aimed at policy makers, model builders, researchers and graduate students who are building or using forest sector models, as well as at forest industry managers and analysts. While focusing on a specific modeling system - the US Timber Assessment models - the authors highlight the general elements that might comprise a forest-sector market model of any country or region. Approaches to policy analysis are also general and equally applicable to both national and multi-national forest policy development outside the US - particularly in relation to on-going efforts to formulate national programs of sustainable forestry. The text provides literature surveys on relevant modeling issues and policy concerns, and demonstrates the application of the modeling system using a "base case" 50 year projection and a small set of scenarios to illustrate, for example, the effects of changes in public harvest policies, global change, variations in investments in silviculture, and globalization. Darius Adams and Richard Haynes are widely recognized as leading experts in the forest sector modeling field.
Synopsis
Figure 1-1. Post-World War II US assessment history. 1973)weremotivatedbytheemergingcon?ictsinthepost-WorldWar II period between rapidly increasing softwood harvests and declining timber growth. These are called the Outlook Studies. The last six studies (1980, 1985, 1989, 1993, 2000, 2005) have been conducted to meet the requirements of the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act (RPA) of 1974. These are called the RPA Timber Assessments. 6 The Challenge of Developing Models 1. 2 SHAPING THE ASSESSMENT SYSTEM This initial chapter describes the development and speci?c structure of the Assessment System. We consider past policy analysis needs and federal legislative requirements, antecedent modeling and projection approaches, characteristics of the US forest sector, and recent trends in public and private resource management. At the federal level, and in some states and regions, the USA has a lengthy history of using resource and market models to explore policy issues and to examine the e?ects of alternative policy actions. Many of these studies have been undertaken on an irregular basis as issues emerged and resource conditions changed. The RPA legislation mandated a regular cycle of nationwide assessments by the Forest Service, examining trends and conditionsinanarrayofresourceusesandservices(climate, minerals, range, recreation, timber, andwater). ThestructureoftheAssessment System re?ects both the requirements of the RPA legislation and the unique characteristics of the US forest sector, which it is designed to simulate. IntheyearssinceenactmentoftheRPAlegislation, mana- ment directions, and objectives on both public and private lands in the USA have continued to evolve. The structure of the Assessment System has been adapted to re?ect these tr
Synopsis
The text provides literature surveys on relevant modeling issues and policy concerns. It demonstrates the application of a modeling system using a "base case" 50-year projection and a small set of scenarios. These illustrate, for example, the effects of changes in public harvest policies, variations in investments in silviculture, and globalization. It is aimed at policy makers, researchers and graduate students who are building or using forest sector models.
Table of Contents
Section 1: Timber Assessments in Supporting the Development of National Forestry Programs and Policy. 1. The challenge of developing models to support forest sector policy analysis. 1.1 Introduction. 1.2 Shaping the Assessment System. 1.2.1 Past studies, methods, and policy intent. 1.2.2 Requirements of the RPA legislation. 1.2.3 Characteristics of the U.S. forest sector. 1.2.4 Changing management paradigms on public and private lands. 1.3 General model attributes; RW Haynes, DM Adams.- 2. Methodological considerations in developing the Timber Assessment Projection System. 2.1 Introduction. 2.2 Approaches to forest policy planning and analysis. 2.3 Overview of the Assessment System. 2.3.1 RPA legislation, past analytical traditions and model structure. 2.3.2 Outline of the Assessment System. 2.4 Some general considerations in forest sector model development. 2.4.1 Static or dynamic models. 2.4.2 Number of market levels. 2.4.3 Resource detail. 2.4.4 Form and extent of spatial detail. 2.4.5 Exogenous or endogenous land base. 2.4.6 Exogenous or endogenous management investment; DM Adams, RW Haynes.- Section 2: Model Components. 3. Solid wood--Timber Assessment Market model. 3.1 Introduction. 3.2. General TAMM structure. 3.3 Models of solid wood market components. 3.3.1 Demand for softwood lumber, softwood plywood, and OSB. 3.3.2 Demand for hardwood lumber. 3.3.3 Product supply relations and capacity adjustment. 3.3.4 Demand for logs and stumpage. 3.3.5 Sawtimber stumpage supply. 3.3.6 Nonstructural panels. 3.3.7 Transport costs. 3.4 Model solution. 3.4.1 Market equilibrium. 4.2 Links to other model elements. 3.5 Review of approaches to modeling the solid wood sector. 3.5.1 Short-term models versus long-term models. 3.5.2 Specification of demand. 3.5.3 Supply-side specification, log demand, and capital stock. 3.5.4 Spatial structure and trade. 3.5.5 Sawtimber supply; DM Adams.- 4. North American Pulp and Paper model (NAPAP). 4.1 Introduction. 4.1.1 Historical context. 4.2 NAPAP model-origins and objectives. 4.2.1 Background. 4.2.2 Specifications. 4.2.3 FPL pulpwood model. 4.2.4 NAPAP model. 4.3 Other models and related literature. 4.3.1 Contemporaneous forest sector models. 4.3.2 Spatial equilibrium modeling. 4.3.3 Price-endogenous linear programming. 4.3.4 Techno-spatial equilibrium modeling. 4.4 Mathematical structure of NAPAP model. 4.4.1 Objective function. 4.4.2 Demand. 4.4.3 Supply. 4.4.4 Material balance constraints and prices. 4.4.5 Manufacturing capacity constraints. 4.4.6 Net manufacturing costs and input-output coefficients. 4.4.7 Recursive relationships. 4.4.8 Selected outputs. 4.4.9 Conclusions; PJ Ince , J Buongiorno.- 5. Methods for projecting areas of private timberland and forest cover types. 5.1 Introduction. 5.2 History and scope of large-scale forest area change projections. 5.3 Structure of land-use and land-cover modeling. 5.4 Land-use modeling. 5.4.1 Land-use theory. 5.4.2 Land-use model estimation. 5.4.3 Examples of regional models. 5.5 Projecting land-use changes. 5.5.1 Projections of exogenous variables. 5.5.2 Projection methods for land uses. 5.6 Land-cover modeling. 5.6.1 Type transition theory. 5.6.2 Type transition model estimation. 5.7 Model validation. 5.8 Summary. Appendix 5: Land-use data; R Alig, A Plantinga.- 6. Timber inventory and management--ATLAS. 6.1 Introduction. 6.2 ATLAS structure and linkage to other Assessment System elements. 6.2.1 Inventory strata and inventory data. 6.2.2 Growing stock removals and harvest requests. 6.2.3 Timberland area and forest type change. 6.2.4 Management intensity. 6.2.5 Modeling forest growth. 6.2.6 Modeling yields under different harvesting methods/silvicultural regimes. 6.3 Management investment. 6.4 Other approaches to inventory projection; JR Mills, DM Adams.- 7. Exogenous assumptions-framing the base case and scenarios. 7.1 Introduction. 7.2 Exogenous variables in the Assessment System. 7.2.1 Macroeconomic activity. 7.2.2 International trade in forest products. 7.2.3 Timber supply from public lands. 7.2.4 Adjustments for sources of sources of harvests and removals; RW Haynes, DM Adams.- 8. Model solution, validation and control. 8.1 Introduction. 8.2 Linking model components and model solutions. 8.3 Model validation. 8.3.1 Validation considerations for individual components. 8.3.2 In-sample forecast error measures in the full projection system. 8.4 Model control. 8.4.1 Capacity adjustment. 8.4.2 Private stumpage supply behavior. Appendix 8: The Gauss-Seidel method for iterative solution of systems of equations; DM Adams.- Section 3: Projections and Scenarios. 9. Base case projection. 9.1 Introduction. 9.2 Land-base and cover-type changes. 9.3 Timber resource trends. 9.3.1 Softwoods. 9.3.2 Hardwoods. 9.4 Forest products markets. 9.4.1 Softwood harvest. 9.4.2 Hardwood harvest. 9.4.3 Prices. 9.5 Canadian production and harvest; DM Adams.- 10. Evolving views of the future of the U.S. forest sector. 10.1 Introduction. 10.2 Visions of 2000. 10.3 The uncertain nature of assumptions. 10.3.1 Population. 10.3.2 National Forest timber harvest. 10.3.3 Trade assumptions. 10.4 Housing starts. 10.5 How have our views of the future changed over the past 50 years?10.5.1 Lumber and plywood production. 10.5.2 Timber harvest. 10.6 Improving the treatment of prices. 10.6.1 Stumpage price projections. 10.7 Closing; RW Haynes, DM Adams.- 11. The impact of public harvest in the U.S. on North American timber and product markets. 11.1 Introduction. 11.2 Structure of public timber sales programs. 11.3 A counterfactual simulation for Western harvest, 1990-1996. 11.4 Simulated market impacts of thinning on Western public lands. 11.5 Discussion. 11.6 Public harvest policy and the Assessment System; DM Adams, RW Haynes.- 12. The role of private management investment in long-term supply. 12.1 Introduction. 12.2 Historical trends and behavior in private management investment in the U.S. 12.3 Private management investment in the Timber Assessment Projection System.12.4 Alternative modeling approaches. 12.5 Scenarios of future management development. 12.5.1 National fixed management intensity and cover-type scenario. 12.5.2 Constant Southern pine plantations scenario. 12.5.3 Simulation results. 12.6 Discussion; DM Adams et al.- 13. Globalization and world trade. 13.1 Introduction. 13.2 Importance of globalization and trade. 13.3 Two RPA Timber Assessment case studies. 13.4 Comparison of GFPM to Timber Assessment Projection System. 13.5 RPA Timber Assessment in GFPM context. 13.6 Effects of exchange rates in GFPM. 13.7 Conclusions and planned applications of GFPM; PJ Ince, J Buongiorno.- 14. The impacts of climate change on forestry. 14.1 Introduction. 14.2 The RPA-Forest Service policy analysis. 14.2.1 Climate change analyses within the RPA Resource Assessments. 14.3 Enhancing the timber policy modeling framework for climate change analyses in the 1980s. 14.3.1 Modeling forest growth and yield in the forest sector model. 14.3.2 Modeling the ecological dynamics of forests. 14.3.3 Linking climate scenarios to ecological models and forest sector models-a modeling framework. 14.4 Projecting climate change, ecological impacts, and forest sector impacts-the static analysis in the 1993 RPA Timber Assessment. 14.4.1 Climate change impacts on forest productivity. 14.4.2 Forest sector impacts as modeled by TEM-Timber Assessment Projection System. 14.5 Projecting climate change, ecological impacts, and forest sector impacts-the transient analysis in the 2005 RPA Timber Assessment. 14.5.1 Ecological response. 14.5.2 Results of TEM-Timber Assessment Projection System analyses. 14.6 Forest sector market models with intertemporal optimization. 14.6.1 FASOM. 14.6.2 Ecological models incorporating species distributional shifts. 14.6.3 Analysis of large scale forest diebacks and the forest sector response. 14.7. Global trade and climate change impacts. 14.7.1 Global trade and shifts in vegetation carbon. 14.7.2 Future price insight and climate change responses in the forest sector. 14.8 Climate scenarios and ecological models--future directions. 14.8.1 Ecological effects of climate change on forests. 14.8.2 Land use modeling and climate change. 14.8.3 Incorporating uncertainty into the analyses. 14.9 Conclusions; LA Joyce.- 15. Projecting technological change. 15.1 Introduction. 15.1.1 Techniques for projecting technological change. 15.2 Technological change in sawtimber harvesting. 15.3 Technological change in producing softwood lumber. 15.4 Technological change in producing softwood plywood. 15.5 Technological change in producing OSB. 15.6 Technological change in making pulp, paper, and paperboard. 15.7 Technological change in use of solid-wood products in major end-uses. 15.8 Impacts of accelerated softwood lumber recovery improvements. 15.9 Conclusions; KE Skog.- 16. Long-term views of the U.S. land base. 16.1 Introduction. 16.2 Base case summary. 16.2.1 Land-base and cover-type changes. 16.3 Examples of alternative land-use projections. 16.3.1 Land-use and forest-cover scenarios. 16.4 Land-use and land-cover dynamics: influences of natural and human factors in alternative futures. 16.5 Summary and conclusions; RJ Alig.- Section 4: Lessons Learned from 25 Years of Forest Sector Modeling. 17. The utility of forest sector models in addressing forest policy questions. 17.1 Introduction. 17.2 Sector model applications to current policy issues. 17.3 Key developments for policy analysis in the Assessment System. 17.3.1 Adopting a mixed model format. 17.3.2 Expanding regional detail. 17.3.3 Adding timber management detail. 17.3.4 Using myopic econometric models. 17.3.5 Working with decision makers. 17.3.6. Scale, science, specificity, and selectivity; DM Adams, RW Haynes.- Glossary.- Appendix 1: Common and scientific names of species.- Appendix 2: Acronym list.- Subject index.-