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PORTLAND, Ore. May 25, 2011. A total of 413.1 million board feet
of softwood logs and 224.9 million board feet of softwood lumber
were exported from Washington, Oregon, northern California, and
Alaska in January, February, and March of this year, according
to the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest (PNW) Research
Station.
“
The volume of softwood log exports was up 50.5 percent from 208.5
million board feet in the first quarter of 2010, while the volume
of softwood lumber exports was up 53.1 percent from 119.5 million
board feet,” said Debra Warren, a research economist with
the station.
Warren compiled the statistics from the U.S. International
Trade Commission and annually authors Production, Prices, Employment,
and Trade in Northwest Forest Industries, a publication that provides
current information on the region’s lumber and plywood production
and prices and employment in the forest industries. The 2010 report
will be published soon and available online at http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/publications/index.shtml.
Other highlights of this year’s first quarter:
Softwood Logs
- Some 104.9 million board feet (25.4 percent) of the
first quarter 2011 west coast log exports went to Japan, 71.5
million board
feet (17.3 percent) went to South Korea, and 220.0 million
board feet
(53.3 percent) went to China.
- Log exports from Oregon and
Washington totaled 379.5 million board feet, up 50.5 percent
from the 2010
first quarter volume
of 191.5
million board feet.
- A total of 9.9 million board feet of
logs was exported from northern California, up from .4 million
board
feet
in the first quarter of 2010. Alaska exported a total
of 23.7 million board feet in the first 3 months of 2011, compared
with 16.6 in
the first quarter of 2010.
Douglas-fir accounted for 58.1 percent of these log exports;
western hemlock, 26.5 percent; spruce, 11.0 percent;
and other softwoods,
4.4 percent.
- The total value of log shipments for the
first 3 months of 2011 was $275.6 million at the ports of exportation,
and
the average
value was $667.19 per thousand board feet. Douglas-fir
averaged $770.96 per thousand board feet; hemlock,
$569.24; spruce,
$314.75; and other softwoods, $769.69.
Softwood Lumber
- Some 100.3 million board feet (44.6 percent) of
the west coast first quarter softwood lumber exports in 2011
went to China,
46.5 million board feet (20.7 percent) went to Canada,
17.2 million board feet (7.7 percent) went to Japan, 9.1 million
board feet
(4.1 percent) went to Taiwan, 8.1 million board feet (3.6
percent) went to the Philippines, 4.0 million board feet (1.8
percent)
went to Indonesia, 3.3 million board feet (1.5 percent)
went to Australia, and 3.1 million board feet (1.4 percent) went
to South Korea.
- Lumber exports from Oregon and Washington
totaled 213.5 million
board feet, up 54.2 percent from the 2010 first quarter
volume of 115.6 million board feet. A total of 11.4 million board
feet was exported from northern California, compared
with
3.7 million
board feet in the first 3 months of 2010. Alaska exported
no lumber during the first quarter of 2011, compared with 0.2
million board
feet in the first quarter of 2010.
- Douglas-fir accounted
for 40.6 percent of the first quarter 2011 softwood lumber
exports; cedars, 5.3 percent; western
hemlock,
16.5 percent; and other softwoods, 37.6 percent.
- The total
value of lumber shipments was $134.3 million at the ports of
exportation, and the average value was
$597.09 per
thousand board feet. Douglas-fir averaged $725.67 per
thousand board feet;
cedars, $905.83; western hemlock, $532.44; and other
softwoods, $443.73.
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The Pacific Northwest Research Station is headquartered in
Portland, Oregon. It has 11 laboratories and centers in Alaska,
Oregon,
and Washington.
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