Looking to the Finland model to find Nova Scotia's forestry potential - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Looking to the Finland model to find Nova Scotia's forestry potential

A Digby County forester hopes lessons from the forestry industry in Finland can help unlock the potential of the industry here.

Digby County forester says lots of jobs, economic development being left in the woods

Harold Alexander and several others travelled to Finland last fall to try to learn what aspects of the forestry industry there could be employed here. (CBC)

When Harold Alexander walks through the woods in Digby County, he sees untapped potential.

The veteran forester has managed woodlots in this area for more than 35 years with an eye on the future. Butit's his concerns today about the state of the industry that took Alexander and four other peopleto Finland in September to find ways to import that country's industry successes here.

For Alexander, the potential centres on small private woodlot owners, the management of their woods and finding access to markets.

"We have a forest policy right now that I think, for the most part, doesn't pay enough attention to the small private woodlot sector," he said.

"We've lost our industry and it doesn't seem to us that there's anybody working to get it back. And if we are working at it, we're not working hard enough and smart enough."

Wood that's been cut from a stand in Digby County waits to be transported to a mill. (CBC)

The trip to Finland was aneye-openerfor Alexander for two reasons: the efficiency of the sectorand the level of co-operation among landowners, industry and government. A report produced from the trip will go to provincial and municipal governments.Alexander and others will also talk to woodlot owners and "anyone else who will listen."

Small private woodlots account for 60 per cent of forests in Finland, yet they produce 80 per cent of annual harvests, something Alexander attributes to organization. Nova Scotia's proportion of private ownership is similar, yet it lags far behind in terms of supply.

Many Nova Scotia woodlot owners who don't work the land themselves believe their only options are to leave it alone or bring someone in toknock it all down, according to Kari Easthouse, a member of the Cape Breton Private Lands Partnership.

For three years, the partnership has acted as an umbrella group toprovide better services to woodlot owners, talking about methods "that are both good for the forest and put a little money in your pocket."

It's the kind ofprofessional forestry services that Alexander saidneed to be expanded provincewide so landowners can bettermanage their woods and access markets.A similar group recently launched to serve the seven counties in western Nova Scotia.

Services include forest management planning, silviculture, recommending contractors, supervising operations, environmentally certifying woodlots and generally acting as a sounding board for owners.

Regular thinning of forests such as this allows for healthier conditions and better wood production. (CBC)

Like Alexander, Easthouse sees a lot of unrecognized opportunities."It takes a long time to grow a forest and a long time to grow an industry, but I think it's important we start working on it as soon as we can."

It's easy to see through a forest in Finland because of how regularly they are thinned, said Alexander. He makes that point by showing off the way he works his own woodlots. The regular maintenance produces more wood and makes for healthier forests, he said.

"It's thinning for the future," said Alexander."If we thin it we know we'll improve the quality over time and the value, both for owners and for the local economy. This is not cut and run."

This approach allows new treesto grow up, with more than enough regeneration to make productive, healthy new Acadian forests. It could also grow thousands of jobs and economic development for rural Nova Scotia, said Alexander.

The need for more mills

But there are limiting factors, most notably a lack of markets. In his area, mills in Weymouth, Meteghan and Bridgewater are gone, which meansfewer opportunities to sell wood close to home.

"The trucking distances to the mills that are still operating is a long ways away and so a lot of value of that wood that in Finland would go to the owners and contractors goes into trucking," Alexander said.

Alexander would like to see the government help facilitate the opening of more mills, so the value of what comes out of the woods stays in those communities.

A greener fuel

The same is true of biomass, he said.

Much of the low grade wood that comes from the forests he manages ends up helping fuel two boilers that heat Universit Sainte-Anne.

Alexander sees this as a far greener approach to energy that also spurs economic development, rather than trucking in oil or natural gas from elsewhere. Hethinks it should be considered for public buildings such as schools and hospitals seeking to get off fossil fuels.

That's another lesson he said Nova Scotia could learn from Finland.