http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-05-12/as-many-as-100-forestry-tasmania-job-could-be-lost-union-says/6463900?section=tas
Forestry Tasmania, Australia’s major blackwood grower, appears to be in free fall. Following on from this recent blog:
http://blackwoodgrowers.com.au/2015/04/30/ft-closer-to-closure/ it appears we are seeing the final act of this decades-long fiasco.
After years of poor financial management and performance and decades of political intrigue and community conflict, the last remnants of the Government business appear to be crumbling.
As the recent blog discussed, there is no road to recovery for Forestry Tasmania. These is just the next round of job losses.
The Smithon office in the north-west, where most of the blackwood is grown and harvested, is to lose 50% of its staff. But stakeholders in Australia’s iconic blackwood industry are completely in the dark. There is no transparency in any of this. All we know is that FT are cutting costs, and their biggest cost is staff.
Whatever happened to the Stakeholder Engagement Policy?
Whatever happened to the Stakeholder Engagement Strategy?
http://www.forestrytas.com.au/forest-management/policies
Do any of these corporate initiatives have any purpose or meaning?
It seems not! Perhaps they’re just window dressing when the need suites the occasion (like an FSC audit).
The impact of staff cuts on forest management and operations has not been made public.
So much for sustainability and certification! It’s business.
If you can’t make a profit then you aren’t sustainable!
Will this be the end of Australia’s iconic blackwood industry? Or will the industry finally turn to private blackwood growers for its future?
When is Tasmania going to get a fully commercial, profitable forest industry based on profitable tree growing?



UNESCO calls for changes to Tasmania’s draft World Heritage Management Plan to prohibit logging and mining
In the ABC News yesterday:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-05-30/unesco-calls-for-world-heritage-area-draft-plan-changes/6508506?section=tas
So the UNESCO World Heritage Committee is now questioning the policies of the Tasmanian State Government.
In Paris overnight, UNESCO’s WHC urged the draft plan be changed. An initial review cited concerns that the plan appeared to create potential for logging operations and mining activity in the World Heritage Area.
An article by Vica Bayley on Tasmanian Times provides more details:
http://tasmaniantimes.com/index.php?/weblog/article/unesco-drafts-a-damning-rejection-of-world-heritage-management/
The draft decision of the World Heritage Committee, for consideration at its [forthcoming] June meeting, represents a damning rejection of the Tasmanian Government’s proposed management of Tasmania’s World Heritage Area.
The draft decision identifies ……. prohibiting logging and mining via upgraded conservation tenure as key actions that need to be taken.
Informed by expert reports from the Committee’s advisory bodies, the draft decision …. urges … that commercial logging and mining are not permitted within the entire [WHA] property, and that all areas of public lands within the property’s boundaries… have a status that ensures adequate protection (p. 56).
The draft Committee decision can be found at:
http://whc.unesco.org/archive/2015/whc15-39com-7BAdd-en.pdf. (1.8MB pdf file).
Pages 54 and 56 of the document are the most relevant.
It appears that Tasmania’s special timbers industry is fast running out of options, at least in terms of access to a taxpayer subsidised public forest resource. The World Heritage Committee will not accept special timbers logging within the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.
Here are some of my previous stories about the Draft Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area Management Plan:
http://blackwoodgrowers.com.au/2015/02/10/draft-twwha-management-plan-representation/
http://blackwoodgrowers.com.au/2015/03/25/tourism-council-sees-the-light/
Curiously the ABC news article says that the Tasmanian tourism Industry supports the draft Plan, when in fact the Tourism Council’s own submission is extremely qualified in its support, with strong opposition to the logging and mining proposals in the Plan.
http://blackwoodgrowers.com.au/2015/03/09/deloraine-stringfest-world-heritage-area-logging/
So when will Tasmania get a fully commercial, profitable forest industry?
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Posted in Commentary, Politics, Tonewood
Tagged TWWHA, UNESCO, World Heritage Area logging