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Turkey reforesting fire torn areas with more fire-resistant trees
Turkey is reforesting fire-ravaged areas with carefully selected species to strengthen resistance against future blazes, Agriculture and Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumakli said. Source: Turkey Today “We select resistant species according to the soil structure, climate conditions, and ecosystem of each region,” Mr Yumakli said. “Species such as cypress, ash, carob, plane, sweetgum, oak, and stone pine are planted in five to 10 rows. In this way, resistance against fires is increased around strategic facilities and residential areas.” Speaking to Türkiye daily, Mr Yumakli said the rehabilitation of burned areas is a top priority. “With scientifically based afforestation efforts, the General Directorate of Forestry is giving breath to the future,” he said. “We carry out our work according to the soil structure, climate conditions, and ecosystem characteristics of each region. We carefully select fire-resistant species.” “Through the Project for the Rehabilitation of Burned Areas and the Establishment of Fire-Resistant Forests (YARDOP), different plant species are being used to change the behaviour of fire, reduce its intensity, and prevent its spread,” Mr Yumakli said. Each year, thousands of hectares of forest are destroyed by fires in Türkiye. Izmir, Antalya, Mugla, Bursa, Canakkale, and Balikesir are among the regions most affected in recent years. While efforts to combat fires continue, reforestation is underway in the burned areas. Yumakli also highlighted policies addressing the global climate crisis. “Within the framework of the Agricultural Drought Strategy and Action Plan we prepared for the 2023–2027 period, we aim to ensure sustainable water supply,” he said. “All the agricultural drought risks of our provinces are analyzed at the district level through field observations, as well as data on temperature and precipitation, reservoir occupancy rates in dams built for irrigation purposes, and many other variables, which are also discussed with stakeholders,” he added. Turkey has faced a prolonged drought since March, affecting over 60% of the soil and contributing to thousands of fires this summer. The country also recorded its hottest July in 55 years, the environment ministry said in early August. Temperatures at 66 of Turkey’s 220 weather stations showed an average rise of 1.9 degrees compared with previous years. The country also registered its highest-ever recorded temperature, 50.5 degrees Celsius in late July in Silopi, in the southeast. Weeks of scorching heat were accompanied by wildfires across Türkiye. Fourteen people lost their lives battling blazes in July in the western part of the country. On 8 August, wildfires in the west forced authorities to suspend shipping in the busy Dardanelles Strait and evacuate three villages.
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Vietnam facing major challenges post US trade barriers
Rising uncertainty around US trade policies is emerging as a significant challenge for many economies, including Vietnam, prompting local businesses to adopt long-term, strategic adjustments to preserve their competitive advantage and deepen integration into global supply chains. Source: Voice of Vietnam Wood production, processing, and export is one of Vietnam’s key industries, but it is currently facing a direct impact from trade competition and tariff barriers. Nguyen Chanh Phuong, vice president of the Handicraft and Wood Industry Association of Ho Chi Minh City (HAWA), notes that in early August 2025, the United States imposed reciprocal duties of 20% on Vietnamese imports, and the figure could rise to 40% if illegal transshipment is detected. By the end of the month, the US also launched an investigation into Vietnam’s wood and furniture imports. “These moves are creating prolonged uncertainty for the wood processing industry,” Phuong says. “Although Vietnam’s wood exports grew by 8% in the first seven months of 2025, the risks remain high. The ability to control domestic raw material supply will be a decisive factor in maintaining Vietnam’s status as a sustainable source in the global market.” Similarly, the textile and garment industry is feeling the pressure. According to Pham Van Viet, vice president of the Ho Chi Minh City Association of Garments, Textiles, Embroidery and Knitting (AGTEK), Vietnam’s apparel exports to the US face an average tax rate of 35.2%, including 20% in reciprocal duties which is far higher than competitors like Bangladesh or India. In addition, up to 50% of imported fibres and materials originate from China, making them vulnerable to origin-based tariffs. “Export growth to the US has already slowed, dropping from 9-10% down to just 4-5% in July 2025 alone,” says Viet. In addition to tariff policies, the United States is also ramping up selective protectionist measures. On August 19, the US Department of Commerce announced a list of 407 derivative steel and aluminum products, subject to a 50% tariff, including several strategic items such as wind turbines, mobile cranes, and ships, adding further challenges for Vietnam’s strategic manufacturing sectors. Professor Tran Ngoc Anh, from Indiana University and founder of the Vietnam Innovation Network, points out that US trade barriers are no longer broad-based but instead target specific industries they view as unfair competitors. “This is a new strategy aimed at protecting domestic industries while sending a clear signal to trading partners,” he analyses. According to experts, US trade policy has moved beyond isolated tariff actions to become a broader geopolitical instrument with far-reaching effects across continents. For Vietnam, while export opportunities persist, they now require a significant restructuring of key industries, particularly wood processing and textiles, to stay competitive and compliant with the evolving global trade landscape. For the wood industry, HAWA Vice President Nguyen Chanh Phuong emphasises that despite the shifting policies, the US is the top market and is more stable than others. To mitigate risks, he stresses the need to expand into new export markets, diversify raw material sources, and produce more value-added products that combine wood with materials like fabric, leather, aluminium, or steel, especially in items like sofas or composite furniture. Professor Tran Ngoc Anh suggests that companies explore hybrid models by manufacturing in Vietnam and completing final assembly or packaging in the US. This approach could help balance cost advantages with compliance to political and security expectations in the US market. He also urges businesses to focus on non-strategic product categories to avoid trade conflicts and to ensure transparency and traceability, potentially using technologies like blockchain. Instead of competing solely on cost, companies should build strong Vietnamese brands with unique value propositions.
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Vanuatu to streamline trade of forestry products
To strengthen compliance and streamline the trade of forestry products, the Vanuatu Government has implemented the Forestry Module through its Trade Single Window (TSW). Source: Timberbiz This new module is a major milestone in the ongoing implementation of the Vanuatu Electronic Single Window (VeSW) Project, aimed at simplifying and accelerating international trade processes across the country. Developed in close collaboration with the national project team, the Forestry Module digitizes and automates the application, processing, and issuance of Export Permits for regulated forestry products. The system will be used by the Department of Forestry (DoF), under the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Forestry and Biosecurity (MALFB), and its key stakeholders, including exporters and customs brokers. “This is a critical step forward in modernizing how we manage our forestry exports,” said Mr. Tekon Timothy Tumukon, Director General MALFB. “By integrating the forestry permitting process into the Trade Single Window system, we are enhancing transparency, compliance, and ease of doing business for our exporters.” Prior to this development, the Department of Forestry operated a fully manual permitting system, centralized at its main office in Port Vila, limiting its ability to expand its regulatory oversight to a wider range of forestry products and geographic areas. Additionally, it was challenging for Vanuatu Customs to verify permits at the border before allowing exports. With the introduction of the Forestry Module, the entire permitting process becomes digital and streamlined. The new system enables: Electronic submission and processing of export permit applications Automatic verification of permit status by Vanuatu Customs at points of export Expansion of permit processing to additional DoF offices across the country Improved regulatory oversight of a broader range of forestry products. By implementing this module within the Trade Single Window system, Vanuatu ensures interconnectedness between the Department of Forestry and Customs, strengthening controls on regulated products while reducing administrative burdens on both traders and government officials. The initiative was brought to live with support from the UN Trade and Development as the Single Project Implementing Partner and the Vanuatu Government.
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Escalation Sensation
‘Escalation Sensation’ chronicles the history of the last operational wooden railway escalators in Australia. After 60 years of service, the much-loved wooden ‘Otis’ escalators at Town Hall and Wynyard Stations in New South Wales were retired and replaced in 2017. Source: Timberbiz The NSW Railways first installed escalators for the deep underground stations at Wynyard and Town Hall when they opened in 1932. They were an innovative people-moving technology adopted by Bradfield to bring an ambitious transport plan to Sydney. Escalators proved to be an integral part of the new underground railway system moving large numbers of passengers quickly in peak hours between street, concourse and platforms. Adopting the ‘modern’ escalator was a signal that Sydney was on par with the latest railway technology and design from around the world. Despite metal alternatives being available at the time, replacements in the 1950s were again OTIS wooden tread machines. Once installed, the robust 1950s escalators were well maintained by dedicated railway staff that extended the machine’s working life considerably in two of the busiest stations on the network. Over the years they became a ‘must-see’ for Sydney visitors and a fond experience for regular users. While in operation the escalators moved thousands of Sydney commuters and visitors each day, right up until their retirement in 2017. After rumbling reassuringly for over 60 years, at the end of their working life they were some of the rarest and much-loved escalators in the world. Completed throughout 2017-18, ‘Escalation Sensation’ chronicles the history of the wooden escalators in Town Hall and Wynyard Stations. It also captures lasting memories and the final days of operation prior to their retirement in 2017. A booklet Escalation Sensation traces the introduction and evolution of escalators, and their use into the public transport network in NSW and Australia. It looks at the principals of how escalators work and how they have evolved over time. It then focuses on the much-loved wooden escalators installed at Wynyard and Town Hall Stations from their installation in the 1930s, their replacement in the 1950s and their replacement in 2017. A documentary is also available that has a series of interviews conducted with historians, railway staff and project teams who maintained and upgraded the historic escalators. The documentary captures their perspectives to produce an absorbing narrative, supported by motion graphics, historical images, archival and contemporary footage of the use, maintenance and final days of the wooden escalators. The video is at https://vimeo.com/265110938
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Tasmanian woman who set Forico forest ablaze ordered to pay compensation
A Tasmanian woman who went on a bushfire-lighting spree that destroyed 56 hectares of commercial timber plantations has been ordered to pay almost half a million dollars in compensation. Source: Pulse Tasmania Michelle Dawn Frankcombe, 55, forced emergency crews to battle multiple blazes across northern Tasmania in early 2023. She pleaded guilty to nine counts of unlawfully setting fire to vegetation, with her fires stretching from Lower Beulah to Stoodley. The Supreme Court heard her first blaze tore through timber plantations at different stages of growth, owned by forest management company Forico. The fire burned for days and left all damaged timber unsalvageable. Justice Tamara Jago described the $464,000 worth of destroyed plantations as showing “the extent of the fire associated with this charge” when sentencing Frankcombe to 15 months’ home detention. The fires became more frequent through February and March, with Frankcombe lighting blazes on February 25, then on March 4, 5, 6, 10, 15, 23 and 24. Most of the later fires burned only small patches – some as little as 30 square metres of grassland – but one spread across 300 square metres of bushland before firefighters contained it. CCTV captured Frankcombe’s car near several fire locations, while forensic testing of matches found at one scene produced a positive DNA match. When first questioned, she denied involvement and even tried to implicate her adult children. After repeated police interviews, she admitted to lighting some of the fires. “You repeated this dangerous conduct, many times, over a number of weeks,” Justice Jago said. “It is most fortunate that the main of the other fires did not get out of control, but of course it cannot be overlooked that many emergency personnel resources were engaged in ensuring that did not occur.” The court heard Frankcombe’s fire-lighting began after confronting her father about childhood sexual abuse. A forensic psychologist found she used the fires to release intense emotions linked to chronic post-traumatic stress disorder. Frankcombe must pay $464,000 compensation to Forico and serve her sentence under strict electronic monitoring conditions.
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One, Two, Tree in WA
WA’s Department of Water and Environmental Regulation is managing the delivery of the WA Tree Recovery Program, working closely with residents, local governments and the Perth Zoo to replant trees lost from the effects of Polyphagous shot-hole borer (PSHB). Source: Timberbiz To support the replacement of lost trees, $7.2 million in WA Government funding over four years has been made available for replanting initiatives by local governments, residents and the Perth Zoo. The program will provide funding to local governments impacted by PSHB through round 1 of the Local Government Grant Program, which closed on 7 July 2025. Applicants will be advised on the outcome of applications week commencing 8 September 2025. Currently, the WA Tree Recovery Program is offering rebates to residents who buy a tree to replace one lost as a result of PSHB. It’s as easy as One, Two, Tree. West Australian residents impacted by tree loss as a result of Polyphagous shot-hole borer (PSHB) can now access a rebate of up to $150 for every tree replanted. PSHB, a tiny beetle that digs deep into the trunks, stems and branches of trees and plants, has been impacting trees across Perth in recent years. The State Government is committed to strengthening Perth’s urban canopy for the future. Eligible Western Australian landowners can now claim up to $150 for every tree removed by the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) as a result of PSHB. Tree planting establishment items can also be included in this $150 claim. Eligible establishment items include soil, soil improver, fertiliser, mulch, soil wetting agent, tree support stakes and guards and additional eligible trees. Residential rebate program is open to Western Australians who have had a tree removed from their property under DPIRD authorisation due to PSHB. To receive the rebate you must ensure: Your replacement tree’s canopy must reach at least three metres in height when mature. Your replacement tree must not be a box elder maple (Acer negundo), coral tree (Erythrina x sykesii), or a robinia (Robinia pseudoacacia, also known as mop top robinia or black locust). These tree species are extremely susceptible to PSHB and increase the risk of infestation to surrounding trees. You have a photo of the plant label showing the tree’s scientific or common name to submit in your claim. You purchase your tree and any establishment items in one transaction and ensure you get a tax invoice as proof of purchase. You will need a valid tax invoice to claim your rebate. The national biosecurity response to PSHB has transitioned to a management phase following a decision by the National Management Group that it is no longer technically feasible to eradicate the pest. The Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) is leading the transition to management in WA to minimise the impact of shot-hole borer on Perth’s tree canopy and help protect the State’s horticultural industries. Over the next 18 months, DPIRD will work with industry, community and local government partners to build capacity to manage the pest.
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Tasmanian timber awards its finest
From the forest to finished products, Tasmania’s forest and timber industries came together on Friday night to celebrate the outstanding achievements of individuals and organisations at the 2025 Tasmanian Timber Awards. Source: Timberbiz Hosted by the Tasmanian Forests and Forest Products Network (TFFPN), the biennial event drew 250 guests to the Tailrace Centre in Launceston to recognise excellence across the sector, from harvesting and forest management to innovation, sustainability, design, safety and tree farming. Deputy Premier Guy Barnett set the tone for the evening, championing the industry with his message that “wood is good – sustainable, recyclable, and the ultimate renewable”. TFFPN Board Director Dr Louise Wallis said the Awards were a proud moment for the industry. “It’s always a great moment to bring everyone together and recognise the diversity cross the forest and timber products sector,” she said. “These awards highlight the breadth of our industry – from growing and managing forests, through to fire management, harvesting, processing, innovation, design and safety. “By coincidence, this year’s outstanding and emerging leaders both came from the transport side of the industry – one through innovative engineering and manufacturing, the other through logistics. What stood out for me was their quiet leadership and generosity, always supporting their peers and helping to lift the whole industry.” Among the winners was Francis Richardson of Orana Enterprises, named Emerging Leader in the Tasmanian Timber Industry for his drive to improve innovation and efficiency in timber transport. Trainee of the Year went to Melody Reihana of Sustainable Timber Tasmania, whose passion and commitment to sustainable forestry have quickly marked her as a future industry leader. The Innovation Award was presented to Sustainable Timber Tasmania and Indicium Dynamics for Fire Foresight, Tasmania’s first end-to-end digital bushfire detection and alerting system. The night’s highest honour was awarded to Graeme Elphinstone of Elphinstone Engineering, who received the Outstanding Contribution to the Tasmanian Timber Industry Award in recognition of more than 50 years of innovation, leadership, and service. A true pioneer, Mr Elphinstone transformed timber transport with designs that set new global benchmarks for safety and efficiency, including Australia’s first on-vehicle weighing system, the folding pole jinker, and the EasySteer suspension system. Equally respected for his commitment to people and place, he kept his operations in Triabunna through industry downturns, safeguarding local jobs and mentoring future generations of timber professionals. Internationally renowned for his engineering achievements, he is admired at home for his integrity, generosity, and lifelong dedication to strengthening both his community and the industry. It was a big week of recognition for Mr Elphinstone, who was also elected to the Shell Rimula National Road Transport Wall of Fame. “Receiving the Outstanding Contribution Award was almost overwhelming. You put in the work over many years without expecting recognition, and then to hear such genuine, positive comments from across the sector is incredibly humbling. This acknowledgement means a great deal,” Mr Elphinstone said. “What I love most is seeing young people come into the sector and make their mark. I often say there are only two reasons you leave us – either you’re not quite where you need to be, or you’re moving on to better yourself. “Watching the next generation take those opportunities and shape the future is what keeps me inspired.” The Awards highlighted not only individual excellence, but the strength, resilience and collaboration that underpins Tasmania’s forest and timber products industries. 2025 Tasmanian Timber Awards Winners Emerging Leader in the Tasmanian Timber Industry Winner: Francis Richardson, Orana Enterprises Excellence in Design and/or Use of Tasmanian Timber Winner: Align Architecture & Interiors, and Saxon Hall Architecture Timber Processing Excellence Winner: Britton Timbers Excellence in Environmental Management Practices Winner: Dydee Mann Forest Growing and Management Excellence Winner: Forico Harvesting Excellence Winner: Midway and their contractors Innovation Award Winner: Sustainable Timber Tasmania & Indicium Dynamics Outstanding Contribution to the Tasmanian Timber Industry Winner: Graeme Elphinstone, Elphinstone Engineering Trainee of the Year Winner: Melody Reihana, Sustainable Timber Tasmania Tree Grower of the Year Winner: Malcolm Larner Workplace Health and Safety Excellence Winner: Forico.
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Unions condemn park that will devastate local communities
The Australian Workers’ Union and the Timber, Furnishing & Textiles Union have joined forces to condemn the NSW Government’s announcement to lock up an additional 176,000 hectares of working forest to establish a Great Koala National Park. Source: Timberbiz The unions say the area – some five times larger than the 37,000 hectares recommended by the Government’s own Industry Advisory Panel – will devastate regional communities, cost hundreds of jobs and risk thousands more across the state’s $3 billion hardwood timber industry. AWU NSW Secretary Tony Callinan said the Government’s decision represents a betrayal of working families and regional communities that have sustainably managed these forests for generations. “(Minister for the Environment, Penny Sharpe) has chosen to ignore the government’s own expert panel’s advice and to bow to an irrational, deep green ideological agenda that will gut regional towns on the NSW mid north coast,” Mr Callinan said. “The Industry Advisory Panel, which the Government itself established, recommended 37,000 hectares as a balanced approach that would protect koalas while preserving jobs. Instead, the Government has gone nearly five times larger, showing complete disregard for the workers and communities who will pay the price for this decision. “The latest CSIRO research shows koala numbers in NSW are stable and thriving. This fundamentally undermines the Government’s justification for such an extreme expansion,” TFTU NSW Secretary Alison Rudman said every timber worker’s pay cheque flowed directly into small regional economies. “When you kill the timber industry, you kill the towns. Businesses close, schools lose students, health services withdraw, and entire communities wither away. We’ve seen it happen before, yet the government seems determined to repeat those mistakes,” he said. “This is political expediency at its worst. The environment minister as the leader of the government in the Upper House has opted for a cynical trade-off over good jobs, good science, and good policy. “The Government’s own consultation process found timber workers in the region earn, on average, twice as much as those in tourism. No family can absorb a 50% pay cut in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis, and let’s be clear, there are no real alternative jobs waiting for these workers.” Mr Callinan said the decision was not about being pro or anti koala. “We all want to see koalas thrive. What we’re against is the unnecessary destruction of an entire industry and the communities it supports when there is a science-based option that achieves both conservation and a viable timber industry,” he said “Forestry Corporation has a good track record of managing large areas of public land in NSW, including managing the bush risk. Without a forestry industry we are concerned that that the risk of catastrophic wildfires that kill all wildlife, including koalas will be increased.” While maintaining the decision should be reversed, the unions have presented the NSW Government with a comprehensive package of minimum requirements for any workers displaced by the park’s establishment. “It is lunacy to kill these jobs, but if the government is determined to do so our unions intend to do everything we can to ensure that the displaced workers are compensated fairly and assisted to gain alternate jobs,” Mr Callinan said.
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Sustainable timber industry decimated by koala park in NSW
The announcement of the decision to create a full-size Great Koala National Park on the Mid North Coast of NSW is a missed opportunity to maintain a sustainable timber industry and a stable koala population, according to the Australian Forest Contractors Association. Instead, the AFCA says, one is being decimated while the other is built on little more than hope. Source: Timberbiz After a 14-month assessment process which included seeking input from industry and a further 9 months of delays, the government has settled on the one option with the weakest evidence and the most problems, CEO of the Australian Forest Contractors Association Tim Lester said. For the forest contracting crews the decision means they are being sacked on Father’s Day and with no notice. “The Government spoke to affected sawmills but not forest services businesses which means these employers have had any notice on what tell their staff about coming to work tomorrow,” Mr Lester said. “A temporary moratorium assumes a future return to work. Let’s call it what it is – an immediate closure. In Victoria we experienced the chaos caused by a government that did not give businesses and communities the time they need to adjust. This is spin for a political announcement. “We engaged in the assessment and consultation process in good faith on the basis of the government’s twin election commitments of a koala park and a sustainable timber industry. But the government has accepted ideology over evidence and hope over science. “National parks have a terrible record when it comes to protecting populations of threatened species because hope is not a strategy. We are at risk of repeating the same mistakes. “The greatest irony is that the NSW National Parks’ own research shows the claim that koalas are under threat in this area is wrong. The population of koalas in NSW state forests is high and stable thanks to an active and sustainable forest management regime that has been in place for more than a century. The idea that a sustainable timber industry and rich biodiversity are incompatible is pure ideology and not backed by the scientific evidence or history. “Koalas will not be ok in a forest managed through benign neglect as we have seen in the Pilliga. The tourism sector is already bustling, and the known visitation, travel and spending patterns do not support small communities, as we have seen in southern NSW. The massively increased cost of managing a national park will not improve the NSW Budget bottom line, as we have seen in Victoria. “The government is also relying on damaging the integrity of Australia’s national carbon scheme with a carbon methodology that is scientifically contested and does not meet scheme rules. This shows it is a park at all costs and everything else has been hollow and flawed. “Meanwhile it is the businesses, workers and communities who will suffer. “It is now up to the government to implement a fair and equitable package for industry that provides compensation for the businesses, workers and communities who are having their lives and livelihoods turned upside down by a flawed decision based on a flawed premise.”
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Great Koala Park to wipe out 40% of future hardwood supply
Six timber mills on the NSW mid-north coast will close today, around 300 jobs will be lost and 40% of the state’s future hardwood supply could be locked up for good following the announcement at the weekend of the proposed boundary for the Great Koala National Park. Source: Timberbiz The park will reserve 176,000 hectares of state forest and connect with existing national parks to create a 476,000-hectare reserve – one of the largest in NSW. The government says this park will protect more than 12,000 koalas, 36,000 Greater Gliders and habitat for over 100 other threatened species. “Koalas are at risk of extinction in the wild in NSW – that’s unthinkable. The Great Koala National Park is about turning that around,” NSW Premier Chris Minns said. “We’ve listened carefully and we’re making sure workers, businesses and communities are supported every step of the way.” Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said the Great Koala National Park had been a dream for more than a decade. “It will ensure koalas survive into the future so our grandchildren will still be able to see them in the wild. “These amazing old-growth forests are among the world’s top biodiversity hotspots – home to more than 100 threatened species including greater gliders, the powerful owl and yellow-bellied gliders,” she said. The Government has imposed a temporary moratorium effective today, Monday 8 September, on timber harvesting within the proposed park boundary. Department of Primary Industries officials reportedly began calling affected timber mill owners on Friday ahead of today’s moratorium. The immediate temporary moratorium will impact six out of more than 25 timber mills in the region, and approximately 300 jobs. Response has been swift with industry leaders and the unions condemning the decision. Australian Forest Contractors Association Tim Lester said that for the forest contracting crews the decision means they are being sacked on Father’s Day and with no notice. He said the government has settled on the one option with the weakest evidence and the most problems. Forestry Australia president Dr Michelle Freeman said the Great Koala National Park made a headline, not a science-led plan. “Recent research highlights that koala populations in NSW state forests remain high and stable, thanks to thoughtful regulated management,” she said. And the Australian Workers’ Union and the Timber, Furnishing & Textiles Union said the decision would devastate regional communities, cost hundreds of jobs and risk thousands more across the state’s $3 billion hardwood timber industry. The NSW government says it recognises there will be challenges as the transition begins and is committed to working with local communities every step of the way. Assistance includes JobKeeper-style payments to support workers by covering salaries, and also financial assistance towards business operating costs. As well as financial payments to cover salaries, workers and their families will have immediate free access to mental health, financial and legal counselling services and training support. The NSW Government has committed $6 million to support new opportunities for tourism and small businesses on the Mid North Coast, with the package to be developed in consultation with local communities to grow jobs and investment as the Great Koala National Park is established. An additional $60 million in funding is being announced for the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service to support the establishment of the park. This is in addition to the $80 million announced in 2023. The final creation of the park is dependent on the successful registration of a carbon project under the Improved Native Forest Management Method, which is currently moving through the Federal Government assessment processes. But NSW Australian Forest Products Association chief executive James Jooste said that after two years of consultation the industry was hoping Environment Minister Penny Sharpe would take into account their concerns when announcing the size of the park. “North East NSW is the most valuable region for hardwood production in the state, and a 176,000ha park will cut supply from public forest in half overnight,” he said. The Government says the Great Koala National Park will not end forestry on the North Coast with the Independent Forestry Panel continuing to provide advice to the Government to inform the Forestry Industry Action Plan. NSW Nationals Leader Dugald Saunders told the Daily Telegraph aid the timing of the decision was appalling and would see the livelihoods of entire regional towns “obliterated” overnight. “For thousands of Dads across the North Coast region to be waking up on Father’s Day to the news they no longer have a job is gut wrenching,” he said. “This decision is almost unbelievable but sadly true to form for a government that has shown a complete disregard for this important industry and what it contributes to our state. “Labor’s Great Koala National Park will wipe out 40% of the state’s future hardwood supply and will force the price of construction materials through the roof.”
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