LIGNA 2019: Showcases And Events For The Primary Wood Industry

Next year, from 27 to 31 May, the world’s leading trade fair for woodworking and wood processing plant, machinery and tools will present a wealth of innovations and applications for the entire wood industry. LIGNA 2019 will occupy some 130,000 square meters (1.4 million sq. ft.) of net display space, spread across 10 exhibition halls and the open-air site at the Hannover Exhibition Center. The primary wood industry is an integral part of LIGNA and will feature prominently in halls 25, 26, 27 and on the open-air site. “All the leading providers of plant and machinery for the primary wood industry have already registered for LIGNA 2019,” said Christian Pfeiffer, Deutsche Messe’s Global Director LIGNA & Woodworking Events. “That’s all the big names in sawmill technology, machinery for wood based panel production, technology for custom and mass production involving the processing of solid wood, wood energy technology and, of course, forestry technology. And I’m especially pleased to announce the premiere of a new sawmill technology group pavilion from Latvia, in Hall 25.”

At LIGNA 2019, providers of plant, machinery and equipment for the primary wood industry will feature at numerous showcases and events that go well beyond standard exhibitions:

Guided Tour On “Sawmill Technology – Innovations and Trends”

In 2019, for the very first time, LIGNA will offer a Guided Tour (in German and English) for visitors with an interest in sawmill technology. Faced with dwindling wood resources, sawmill operators are increasingly looking for technologies that enable them to efficiently process sawn timber into value-added products. Manufacturers of sawmilling machinery are rising to this challenge with new high-tech, high-efficiency systems for maximizing sawn timber yield and detecting key characteristics in individual timbers and logs. Hence this tour, which focuses on sawmilling technologies and processes, including the following: machinery for all log applications, whether cut-to-length or uncut, large or small-diameter, plus systems ranging from high-performance to small and versatile, to custom-optimized; machine tools for primary wood processing; machines for tool making and tool maintenance; the full range of timber logistics and log yard products and solutions; machinery for handling, sorting and packaging; measurement technology for all applications; drying technologies for all applications; and energy plant and waste wood utilization technologies for sawmills.

Wood Industry Summit and “Future Workshop For Forestry & Wood” – The innovations platform for the forestry and wood industry

“Access to Resources and Technology” is the focus theme for the 3rd Wood Industry Summit, which will be held in Hall 26. Organized by Deutsche Messe in partnership with the German Forestry Council (KWF), it is an international dialogue and technology showcase comprising a forum, lounge and exhibition area. Its purpose: to help visitors access new growth markets. For the first time, the summit will also feature the “Future Workshop for Forestry & Wood” showcase – a group pavilion for startups that is inspired by the German government’s “Charter for Wood 2.0” policy.

14th German Logging Championship

In 2019, for the first time, Deutsche Messe and the German Woodsmen’s Championships Association (VWMD) will be co-staging the German Logging Championships – the “Formula 1” of forestry skills – on the open-air site at LIGNA. At the 14th German Logging Championship, Germany’s best 100 or so forestry professionals will demonstrate their chainsaw skills under the watchful eye of an expert panel of judges. The contestants’ endurance, handling skills and precision will be put to the test in five disciplines: tree felling, chain fitting, combined cut bucking, precision bucking and delimbing.

Outdoor demonstration site for forestry technology

The outdoor demonstration site premiered successfully in 2017 and is back again for LIGNA 2019. It is a dedicated area where the latest forestry machines and technology developments are shown in action – all under careful expert moderation.
The outdoor site is organized in partnership with the German Forestry Council (KWF) and will be located in the middle of the German Logging Championship area. It will feature moderated technology demonstrations on each day of the show.

KWF Business Pavilion – Tomorrow’s forestry technology today

2019 will mark the ninth time that the German Forestry Council (KWF) is spearheading this special forestry technology presentation at LIGNA. Held in Pavilion 33 beneath the iconic EXPO canopy, the unique, technology-centric forestry industry meeting hub is organized by KWF with input from the German Association of Forestry Contractors (AFL) and the Lower Saxony Forestry Service (as represented by the Lower Saxony School of Forestry – NFBz). It is aimed at forestry companies and takes a manufacturer-neutral look at key forestry issues and challenges.

Among the featured topics are:
Forestry 4.0: In today’s forestry industry, digitization starts among the trees, with all processes, from crop to log yard, now fully integrated. Large scale machines, such as harvesters and forwarders, now have onboard computers and are networked with each other. This is Forestry 4.0, a topic that will also be covered by the displays on the open-air site in front of the pavilion. Highlights here include displays of log-yard data flows and data processing. There will also be displays of technologies dedicated to hazard detection and prevention, safety and rescue for forestry workers. Topics here include “Natural Disasters in the Forest”, “Precision Forestry” and “Forest First-aid and Survival”.

Battery-powered machinery in professional forestry:
Thanks to research in the automotive and energy industries, rechargeable batteries are steadily becoming smaller, more affordable, more powerful, longer-lasting and less maintenance-intensive. These developments are now flowing through into forestry work methods and technologies. Pavilion 33 is about keeping the forestry industry informed of the latest issues and developments. The displays and exhibits on the pavilion’s lower level will be supported by quality discussion forums on the upper level.

Showcase by North Rhine-Westphalia Forestry Service

The group display that the North Rhine-Westphalia Forestry Service is staging in one of the pavilions beneath EXPO canopy next year will explore innovations for sustainable forest management and focus on the further development and digital integration of work processes across the entire primary wood industry value chain. The main topic highlights include resource efficiency in the use of forestry machines and the development of new digital training systems for operators of forestry machinery.

Energy From Wood

The wood industry uses a lot of energy, so efficiency and cost reduction are key priorities. The good news is that wood industry plant operators can achieve major cost reductions and efficiency gains by generating their own power from their own waste wood, chips and sawdust, and by utilizing waste heat and harnessing cogeneration. The Energy from Wood showcase at LIGNA 2019 will show them how. Located in halls 25 and 26, on the open-air site and in pavilions 32, 33 and 35, the showcase will present technologies that wood-industry manufacturers can use to recover process energy and re-use it for heating and electric generation.

“Firewood Production Line” Showcase

The “Firewood Production Line” showcase will be back in 2019 with another comprehensive line-up of exhibits, demonstrations and guided tours dedicated to renewable energy from wood. The program will span all the latest trends, developments and solutions. That’s everything from firewood processing to furnaces and everything else in between.

LIGNA Forestry Get-together

The Forestry Get-together premiered successfully in 2017 as LIGNA’s primary meeting hub for forestry-industry networking and dialogue and will be back again in 2019. Organized by the German Association of Forestry Contractors (AFL), the LIGNA Forestry Get-together will be staged directly in front of Pavilion 33, under the EXPO canopy.

13th Lower Saxony Crane Driving Championships and 4th Women’s Crane Driving Cup

Among the more spectacular events on the open-air site are the Lower Saxony Crane Driving Championships and the Women’s Crane Driving Cup. Held on the Thursday of LIGNA, they offer a thrilling mix of big-machine mastery, sport and entertainment. These two must-see events are organized by the Lower Saxony School of Forestry, Münchenhof, and the German Association of Forestry Contractors (AFL), with support from Deutsche Messe.

Hermal Announces Hardwood CLT Mill

Hermal Announces Hardwood CLT Mill

Hermal Announces Hardwood CLT Mill

 

Burnie, Tasmania Hermal GroupForest Industries Assn. of Tasmania (FIAT) and Australian Forest Products Assn. (AFPA) announced that Hermal Group is building a $190 million hardwood sawmill and hardwood cross-laminated timber complex in Burnie in northwest Tasmania, Australia. It will be called Tasmanian Amalgamated Renewable Timbers.

The Tasmanian Government has committed $13 million in grant and training support funding for the project. Once complete, the facility will employ 200. The facility will process more than 300,000 m3 of sustainable plantation hardwood logs each year.

The Hermal Group is a long-established, private family group run by the Goldschlager family in Melbourne, Australia. The family has been continuously involved in the timber industry for more than seven generations. The Hermal Group is also experienced in Property Development, Project Management and Property Investment. Until recently The Hermal Group was the owner of an ash sawmilling and value-added business, Australian Sustainable Hardwoods (ASH), which was sold to the Victorian government.

For three years the Hermal Group has invested in research and development on developing methods to use juvenile plantation hardwood timbers, specifically the species eucalyptus nitens, as a kiln dried lumber in value-add products manufacturing. The Hermal Group is proposing the conversion of juvenile eucalyptus into high value structural timber to take advantage of multi-story mass timber construction.

“There is an opportunity to create a new vibrant and viable hardwood plantation based, high-value industry in Tasmania which is why we are building this new facility,” the company states.

Separately, the Group is working with Moash University on “Bio-Char-Paste” fuel, which could be suitable to power a Direct Injection Carbon Engine (DICE) or diesel-style engine.

Tasmania is a market leader in Australia in terms of the availability of plantation growth hardwood. E.Nitens is a predominant plantation species in Tasmania due to it being able to attain a higher fiber content in a short period of time. Currently there is a substantial amount of holdings across the state of 15-to-25-year-old plantation timbers. The largest holder of this resource is Forico.

Of the 41,000 ha of eucalyptus plantation under Forestry Tasmania’s management, only 15% (6,300 hectares) is 20 years or older, while 33% (some 13,900 hectares) is younger than 10 years. By 2027, these plantations are forecast to produce about 77,000 m3 of high-quality pruned logs annually.

Forestry Tasmania grows two main eucalyptus species, eucalyptus globulus (Tasmanian blue gum) and eucalyptus nitens (shining gum). Both species have been selected for high growth rates and desirable wood properties. Approximately 80% of the total hardwood estate is currently shining gum, as this species has better frost and disease resistance than Tasmanian blue gum.

However, Tasmanian blue gum timber has superior wood properties (density, strength and pulp yield) to shining gum, making it more commercially attractive. As plantations mature and are harvested, plantings of Tasmanian blue gum may increase to around 50% of the eucalypt plantation estate.

Changes in the building market for timber construction have created a market opportunity for cross-laminated structural timber. “We have successfully developed and tested the source timber and dried product for use in cross-laminated construction,” the company comments.

The cross-lamination process has been used with softwood products; however the difference here is the use of juvenile plantation hardwood, which the company states enhances the structural properties of the end products compared to pine.

Hermal has identified two European machinery options both of which allow for single pass sawing of logs in the proposed sawmill.  Following the drying process the lumber will be placed into the laminated production facility.

Administration, management, marketing and support operations will be housed in Burnie with the production facility.

In 2015, CLT was incorporated into the national design specification for wood.

 

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Oregon Judge Rules Immunity No Defense

Oregon Judge Rules Immunity No Defense

An Oregon district judge has refused to dismiss a 2016 lawsuit filed by counties with state forests within their borders that claimed state officials have refused to maximize timber revenues from lands that counties donated to the state years ago. Attorneys for the state had claimed “sovereign immunity” in the matter—a doctrine that county governments can’t sue the state government—and while the judge initially allowed it as a possible defense, his most recent ruling says that in this case, counties can sue the state to enforce their contract rights.

At issue are timber sale revenues from state lands that were initially donated to the state decades ago, along with accompanying legislation that the lands should be managed for the “greatest permanent value” and revenues shared with the counties. According to the suit, state forestry officials began reducing timber revenues in favor of recreational and environmental protection priorities 20 years ago via an internal policy change. As a result, the counties believe they have been shortchanged and are asking the state for more than $1 billion in revenues.

The judge’s ruling clears the way for the trial to begin, says counties’ attorney John DiLorenzo, adding that maybe the Oregon Dept. of Forestry will now take the case seriously, claiming that until now the state had treated the suit with derision, believing it would be easily dismissed.

Brian Luoma Picked To Lead Alabama’s Westervelt Company

Brian Luoma Picked To Lead Alabama’s Westervelt Company

 

The Westervelt Company named Brian Luoma as President and CEO, succeeding Mike Case, who announced his retirement after more than 32 years with the company. Luoma will oversee Westervelt Lumber, Westervelt Renewable Energy, Westervelt Forest Resources, Westervelt Communities, Westervelt Ecological Services and Westervelt New Zealand.

Luoma most recently served as executive vice president and general manager, Siding, with Louisiana-Pacific Corp.

Jon Warner, Chairman of the Board at The Westervelt Co., based in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, comments, “Brian’s proven leadership and vision will be essential in leading our company.”

“I am thrilled to join the Westervelt team,” Luoma says. “The company’s commitment to excellence and focus on sustainability are the driving forces behind 133 years of success.”

Since 1987, Luoma held roles of increasing responsibility with LP. Luoma graduated in Forestry from Humboldt State University in Arcata, California. He worked for LP while attending college, first as an assistant log scaler at the LP stud mill in Fort Bragg, California and then in the woods as a forestry technician. After graduating he worked for Simpson Timber in Korbel for a year before rejoining LP as timberlands manager in northern California. He then became wood procurement manager for LP’s Western Region. He later led LP’s Northern operations OSB group in Hayward, Wisconsin before moving to LP headquarters as head of forestry, wood procurement and logistics.

He advanced to LP’s vice president of Engineered Wood Products before becoming executive vice president and GM over LP Siding, based at headquarters in Nashville, Tennnessee.

Westervelt operates a high production, modernized southern yellow pine sawmill at Moundville, Alabama, a large industrial wood pellet plant in Aliceville, Alabama, and owns/manages 500,000 acres of timberland.

For more information on The Westervelt Company visit westervelt.com.

 

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