Finland Forestry
Transporting logs from forest to factory
Courtesy Embassy of Finland, Washington
Forests played a key role in the country's economy,
making it
one of the world's leading wood producers and providing
raw
materials at competitive prices for the crucial
wood-processing
industries. As in agriculture, the government had long
played a
leading role in forestry, regulating tree cutting,
sponsoring
technical improvements, and establishing long-term plans
to
ensure that the country's forests would continue to supply
the
wood-processing industries.
Finland's wet climate and rocky soils are ideal for
forests.
Tree stands do well throughout the country, except in some
areas
north of the Arctic Circle. In 1980 the forested area
totaled
about 19.8 million hectares, providing 4 hectares of
forest per
capita--far above the European average of about 0.5
hectares. The
proportion of forest land varied considerably from region
to
region. In the central lake plateau and in the eastern and
northern provinces, forests covered up to 80 percent of
the land
area, but in areas with better conditions for agriculture,
especially in the southwest, forests accounted for only 50
to 60
percent of the territory. The main commercial tree
species--pine,
spruce, and birch--supplied raw material to the sawmill,
pulp,
and paper industries. The forests also produced sizable
aspen and
elder crops.
The heavy winter snows and the network of waterways
were used
to move logs to the mills
(see
fig. 8). Loggers were able
to drag
cut trees over the winter snow to the roads or water
bodies. In
the southwest, the sledding season lasted about 100 days
per
year; the season was even longer to the north and the
east. The
country's network of lakes and rivers facilitated log
floating, a
cheap and rapid means of transport. Each spring, crews
floated
the logs downstream to collection points; tugs towed log
bundles
down rivers and across lakes to processing centers. The
waterway
system covered much of the country, and by the 1980s
Finland had
extended roadways and railroads to areas not served by
waterways,
effectively opening up all of the country's forest
reserves to
commercial use.
Forestry and farming were closely linked. During the
twentieth century, government land redistribution programs
had
made forest ownership widespread, allotting forestland to
most
farms
(see Agriculture
, this ch.;
The Establishment of Finnish Democracy
, ch. 1;
Domestic Developments and Foreign Politics,
1948-66
, ch. 1). In the 1980s, private farmers controlled
35
percent of the country's forests; other persons held 27
percent;
the government, 24 percent; private corporations, 9
percent; and
municipalities and other public bodies, 5 percent. The
forestlands owned by farmers and by other people--some
350,000
plots--were the best, producing 75 to 80 percent of the
wood
consumed by industry; the state owned much of the poorer
land,
especially that in the north.
The ties between forestry and farming were mutually
beneficial. Farmers supplemented their incomes with
earnings from
selling their wood, caring for forests, or logging;
forestry made
many otherwise marginal farms viable. At the same time,
farming
communities maintained roads and other infrastructure in
rural
areas, and they provided workers for forest operations.
Indeed,
without the farming communities in sparsely populated
areas, it
would have been much more difficult to continue intensive
logging
operations and reforestation in many prime forest areas.
Finland's government monitored and influenced all
aspects of
forestry. The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry was
responsible for preparing and implementing forestry
legislation.
Subordinate to the ministry, the National Board of
Forestry
supervised private forests and managed state-owned
forests. The
national board also maintained liaison with the two
central
forestry boards, which in turn controlled a total of
nineteen
district forestry boards. The central and the district
boards
were self-governing bodies comprising representatives of
the
forest owners, wood-processing industries, and forestry
workers.
The boards supervised forest operations, often working in
cooperation with the local forest management associations,
which
were entirely controlled and financed by forest owners.
The ministry carried out forest inventories and drew up
silvicultural plans. According to surveys, between 1945
and the
late 1970s foresters had cut trees faster than the forests
could
regenerate them. Nevertheless, between the early 1950s and
1981,
Finland was able to boost the total area of its forests by
some
2.7 million hectares and to increase forest stands under
40 years
of age by some 3.2 million hectares. Beginning in 1965,
the
country instituted plans that called for expanding forest
cultivation, draining peatland and waterlogged areas, and
replacing slow-growing trees with faster-growing
varieties. By
the mid-1980s, the Finns had drained 5.5 million hectares,
fertilized 2.8 million hectares, and cultivated 3.6
million
hectares. Thinning increased the share of trees that would
produce suitable lumber, while improved tree varieties
increased
productivity by as much as 30 percent.
Comprehensive silvicultural programs had made it
possible for
the Finns simultaneously to increase forest output and to
add to
the amount and value of the growing stock. By the
mid-1980s,
Finland's forests produced nearly 70 million cubic meters
of new
wood each year, considerably more than was being cut.
During the
postwar period, the annual cut increased by about 120
percent to
about 50 million cubic meters. Wood burning fell to
one-fifth the
level of the immediate postwar years, freeing up wood
supplies
for the wood-processing industries, which consumed between
40
million and 45 million cubic meters per year. Indeed,
industry
demand was so great that Finland needed to import 5
million to 6
million cubic meters of wood each year.
To maintain the country's comparative advantage in
forest
products, Finnish authorities moved to raise lumber output
toward
the country's ecological limits. In 1984 the government
published
the Forest 2000 plan, drawn up by the Ministry of
Agriculture and
Forestry. The plan aimed at increasing forest harvests by
about 3
percent per year, while conserving forestland for
recreation and
other uses. It also called for enlarging the average size
of
private forest holdings, increasing the area used for
forests,
and extending forest cultivation and thinning. If
successful, the
plan would make it possible to raise wood deliveries by
roughly
one-third by the end of the twentieth century. Finnish
officials
believed that such growth was necessary if Finland was to
maintain its share in world markets for wood and paper
products
(see Wood-Processing Industries
, this ch.).
Data as of December 1988
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