|
PORTLAND, Ore. September 30, 2003. A partnership among industry,
government, and the forest products industry is working to help
the United States reduce its dependency on fossil fuels, increase
carbon sequestration, and help promote sustainable development
of global economic competitiveness in rural communities.
In 1994, forest products industry leaders created a vision of the
industry in 2020 and called it Agenda 2020. A collaborative research
partnership also was formed by the Department of Energy and the
American Forest and Paper Association to make the vision a reality.
The Forest Service joined the partnership in 1999. In spring 2002
the western research stations of the Forest Service—Rocky
Mountain, Pacific Southwest, and the Pacific Northwest stations—met
to select the group’s first research projects. The first
annual review of the Agenda 2020 western forestry program was held
in Kelso, Wash., the following year.
“
Agenda 2020 has a strong portfolio of national projects funded
primarily by the Department of Energy and the Forest Service in
high impact areas such as biomass gasification, new forest-based
materials, and molecular biology,” explains spokesman Charley
Peterson, “and we have added to that foundation with additional
collaboration among the western research Stations, industry, and
universities. This sponsorship has resulted in excellent science,
enhanced collaboration with forest industry, and improved relations
among the three partners.”
Some of the funded areas of investigation include:
- How thinning and regeneration harvests influence riparian vegetation,
aquatic community structure, and water quality in small headwater
streams,
- Managing coarse woody debris for long-term soil productivity
in the northern Rocky Mountains and in the Douglas-fir region coupled
with climate effects,
- Tools to predict and manage various
tree root diseases,
- Discovery of genes controlling adaptive traits
in Douglas-fir, and
- Various silvicultural treatments to enhance
forest productivity.
“
The early success of this program is clear evidence that significant
scientific progress can be made through collaboration and hard
work in a public-private partnership,” says Greg Johnson,
chair of the forest industry’s western research committee.
Agenda 2020 also includes participation by the Forest Service’s North Central,
Northeastern, and Southern Research Stations whose work will focus on forest
health and productivity. For more information on the Agenda 2020 western forestry
program, contact Charley Peterson at the Pacific Northwest Research Station at
cepeterson@fs.fed.us.
|