Sunday, April 21, 2024

MEATY MATTERS: Forestry not all Jones hopes

Avatar photo
There’s an irony about the combination of the Provincial Growth Fund’s Billion Trees programme, sheep and beef land being sold without needing Overseas Investment Office approval for conversion to forestry, the sharp fall in Chinese log prices and Shane Jones ranting about log traders being intoxicated by high prices.
Reading Time: 3 minutes

According to Jones, these log traders should have supported the domestic timber processing industry though it’s not immediately obvious how domestic sales would have compensated for log exports to China, which exceeded $3 billion over 12 months.

The history of tree planting, well before it was seen as essential for meeting greenhouse gas reduction targets, is no different from any other commodity. 

After an exciting start too much of anything inevitably provokes indigestion. Think oil, dairy, sheep meat, wool, angora, alpacas, logs – you name it, there is always a cycle. The world might even turn away from New Zealand sauvignon blanc one day.

China features strongly as a market with a habit of dominating buying patterns and driving prices up before turning the tap off, though that was more of an issue when the state rigidly controlled all buying.

While Chinese demand for beef and sheep meat appears guaranteed because of the growth in the middle classes and a shortage of animal protein, meat exporters must be careful not to burn their bridges with the rest of the world. 

At least red meat exports to China are moving away from commodity supply towards meeting increasingly sophisticated consumer demand for added-value product forms though there is still the risk Chinese importers will switch to further processing at their end of the supply chain.

In contrast, logs are essentially a straight commodity with added value being limited to log type and specification. 

Lots of other countries have introduced tree-planting programmes so Jones’ scheme is not unique nor is it clear where the markets for further processed timber will be developed. 

Without knocking the need for GHG reduction it’s hard not to conclude it might have been a good idea to work out where the billion trees are going to find a home, admittedly in 30-40 years time. Estimates of the time for demand from China to recover fully range from weeks to six months to 10 years so it’s clear nobody really knows.

It’s a bit rich for Jones to criticise those log traders for taking advantage of a ready market for trees that were planted a quarter of a century ago in the last great forestry boom when Japan was the major market. 

As with other commodities, NZ doesn’t have a large domestic consumption base, which means we must either export in raw form or find ways to add value before exporting. There are no commodity businesses that can survive on the domestic market alone.

Jones is just another in a long line of politicians who invest large sums of taxpayer money into trying to get us to do something noble, otherwise known as altering behaviour or distorting normal market forces. 

In the case of GHG reduction it is such an emotive topic politicians must be seen to take action, to appease both foreign governments and voters at home as well as those who haven’t yet reached voting age but are increasingly vocal. 

As an additional factor, the composition and modus operandi of our Government make it possible for a minority party to push its own agenda, backed by taxpayer funds without proper oversight of the effectiveness of the investment.

Given a stable environment without sudden swings in incentive programmes the market usually gets things fairly right. 

Land and commodity prices respond to the relative demand between sectors reflecting, in NZ’s case, the international marketplace for what we produce and to a lesser extent changes in government policy. 

Since World War II several key events have had a striking impact on the level of global demand for our exports and, as a consequence, land use. 

They include, among others, huge demand for wool during and after the Korean war followed by an inexorable decline in wool prices, Britain joining the European Common Market, supplementary minimum prices, removal of subsidies in 1985 causing collapse of sheep meat prices leading to growth of forestry in late 80s and dairy conversions since the early 90s. 

The impact of free trade with a wealthy, modernising China and climate change are the two most important factors now. They present both opportunities and threats to which the sector must respond. 

The most noteworthy change in land use during the last 50 years has been the conversion of sheep and beef farms to dairy, forestry, deer, grape and horticultural production as well as urban sprawl. 

This has been driven by the returns obtainable from the conversions, all of which have been better than farming sheep and beef. 

Ironically, the effect of political pressure to encourage tree-planting and a streamlined OIO approval process to attract overseas forestry investment coincide with the highest-ever lamb prices in the international market.

While Jones doesn’t give the impression he tolerates anything contrary to his world view, it would be helpful if he considered the unintended consequences of his headlong rush into forestry as well as taking a careful look at where all these logs or added-value timber will be sold. 

A look at past experience might be useful.

Total
0
Shares
People are also reading