Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures

Holders of small forest tenures are largely “market loggers,” selling undifferentiated raw logs into fluctuating local and regional markets at low margins. However, these tenure holders have potential advantages in responding to the changes currently under way in British Columbia?s forest industry....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ambus, Lisa, Davis-Case, D'Arcy, Mitchell, Darcy, Tyler, Stephen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516
id ftjemforrex:oai:jem-online.org:article/516
record_format openpolar
spelling ftjemforrex:oai:jem-online.org:article/516 2023-05-15T16:16:47+02:00 Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures Ambus, Lisa Davis-Case, D'Arcy Mitchell, Darcy Tyler, Stephen 2007-09-20 application/pdf http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516 eng eng Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516/426 http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516 Journal of Ecosystems and Management; Vol. 8 No. 2 (2007) community forestry environmental services forest products forest product markets non-timber forest products value-added info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2007 ftjemforrex 2022-09-05T18:47:28Z Holders of small forest tenures are largely “market loggers,” selling undifferentiated raw logs into fluctuating local and regional markets at low margins. However, these tenure holders have potential advantages in responding to the changes currently under way in British Columbia?s forest industry. Their community networks and local forest knowledge can be helpful in identifying specialty products and niche markets, but they need to collaborate with new partners to share value-added investments and to tap into specialized market opportunities which build on their strengths. Innovative responses may find support from a range of government funding programs (existing or new) and private capital sources. Opportunities may arise from value-chain management, or from collaboration on shared-facility investments. Holders of Community Forest Agreements and private woodlot owners also have rights to botanical products or non-timber forest products. Commercial markets for these and related products are growing, but changes to the current system should be undertaken cautiously so as not to jeopardize the benefits and expertise of knowledgeable local users, or the rights of First Nations. Payment for environmental services is an emerging concept that may provide future commercial benefits to holders of small forest tenures. To take advantage of the widest range of these diverse opportunities will probably require adjustments to provincial forest management policies as well as small tenure operations. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Journal of Ecosystems and Management (JEM)
institution Open Polar
collection Journal of Ecosystems and Management (JEM)
op_collection_id ftjemforrex
language English
topic community forestry
environmental services
forest products
forest product markets
non-timber forest products
value-added
spellingShingle community forestry
environmental services
forest products
forest product markets
non-timber forest products
value-added
Ambus, Lisa
Davis-Case, D'Arcy
Mitchell, Darcy
Tyler, Stephen
Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
topic_facet community forestry
environmental services
forest products
forest product markets
non-timber forest products
value-added
description Holders of small forest tenures are largely “market loggers,” selling undifferentiated raw logs into fluctuating local and regional markets at low margins. However, these tenure holders have potential advantages in responding to the changes currently under way in British Columbia?s forest industry. Their community networks and local forest knowledge can be helpful in identifying specialty products and niche markets, but they need to collaborate with new partners to share value-added investments and to tap into specialized market opportunities which build on their strengths. Innovative responses may find support from a range of government funding programs (existing or new) and private capital sources. Opportunities may arise from value-chain management, or from collaboration on shared-facility investments. Holders of Community Forest Agreements and private woodlot owners also have rights to botanical products or non-timber forest products. Commercial markets for these and related products are growing, but changes to the current system should be undertaken cautiously so as not to jeopardize the benefits and expertise of knowledgeable local users, or the rights of First Nations. Payment for environmental services is an emerging concept that may provide future commercial benefits to holders of small forest tenures. To take advantage of the widest range of these diverse opportunities will probably require adjustments to provincial forest management policies as well as small tenure operations.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ambus, Lisa
Davis-Case, D'Arcy
Mitchell, Darcy
Tyler, Stephen
author_facet Ambus, Lisa
Davis-Case, D'Arcy
Mitchell, Darcy
Tyler, Stephen
author_sort Ambus, Lisa
title Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
title_short Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
title_full Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
title_fullStr Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
title_full_unstemmed Strength in diversity: Market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
title_sort strength in diversity: market opportunities and benefits from small forest tenures
publisher Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press
publishDate 2007
url http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Journal of Ecosystems and Management; Vol. 8 No. 2 (2007)
op_relation http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516/426
http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/516
_version_ 1766002637960904704