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Smart digital services for safety, productivity and sustainability

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:59
Komatsu’s Smart Forestry gives you access to a collection of digital services that help make the workplace safe, smart, productive and sustainable, whether you have one or a hundred forest machines. You can keep track of your machines, collaborate with colleagues, and make wise decisions based on facts. Source: Timberbiz Smart Forestry consists of three different applications, making it easy for you to find the one that suits you and your business. Fleet Monitoring Fleet Monitoring opens new doors for preparing and planning work tasks for harvesters and forwarders alike. As the service is cloud-based, you can plan your work wherever you like and use any device with internet access. You can register identities, products, areas, maps, GIS data and other important information. This ensures that the operator has the correct information even before they start working and having the correct information also minimises the risk of unnecessary driving and mistakes. Fleet Monitoring gathers all machine information about your fleet and continually provides insights into each individual machine. You can see the utilisation, operating status, and exact geographic location of each machine. This entails no extra work for the operator as all data are logged and saved automatically. It’s easy to compare fuel consumption and production and the stored operation and production data are easy to tally, reducing your monthly accounts workload. Fleet Monitoring gives you remote access to many practical functions: check the battery status, monitor the temperature in the cab or start the diesel heater. Access to remote support where Komatsu Forest’s experts connect to your machine offers additional peace of mind. You can even allow a technician to remote control the machine, troubleshoot any problems and update the settings and software. This minimises downtime and saves both time and money – not least by avoiding costly service callout expenses. Technicians can provide remote training as well. Komatsu Vision With Vision it’s easy to share information with each other. The harvester operator plans suitable access roads, log roads and landings based on the worksite conditions. The forwarder operator can see the production in each working zone and optimise their forwarding to avoid unnecessary detours. Once the timber has been forwarded to the landing, the operator can mark the zone complete, simplifying follow-ups. Functions for marking particular areas and boundaries on the map and writing messages enable the team to help each other do a better job. You can also share information with other teams or companies. All information is updated in real-time. Vision helps you to work more efficiently and with less impact on the forest. You get area maps with up-to-date information. You can plan the forwarding based on the harvester’s tracks, thereby saving time, diesel and the environment. You gain a good overview and reliable production data that make it easy to adjust your planning as needed. The map functions also make it easy to send an easily understood final report once an area has been completed. Komatsu Precision Precision uses the latest satellite positioning technology to determine the machine’s position with a margin of error of just a few centimetres. This opens up possibilities for a productive and smart way of working where you as an operator get important information and support to make wise decisions. You can create digital boundaries around the work area or around protected areas and receive warnings if the machine comes too close to the boundary. Thanks to the high precision, machine tracks and stem codes can be clearly visualised, and you can also show the exact position of the processed logs, making it easier to see which assortment is in the log pile. When planning thinning routes, line following with navigation support is a great help, as it helps you stay on the planned route. It is also important that the user experience is as smooth and intuitive as possible, so there are many opportunities to customise both appearance and functionality.

Tigercat’s new 6040 carbonizer

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:59
Tigercat Industries has released the 6040 carbonizer. This long-awaited product replaces the 6050 carbonator that Tigercat marketed for a brief time after acquiring the product through the purchase of ROI in 2019. The mobile onsite wood conversion system is once again available in the marketplace after a comprehensive, ground-up redesign. Source: Timberbiz The 6040 is one of the most environmentally friendly wood debris reduction and conversion systems available on the market. The machine inputs woody debris and produces a high quality organic carbon with up to 90% material reduction. It is an ideal solution for converting unwanted logging and agriculture residue into a useful, high grade organic carbon that can be left onsite as a soil additive or marketed for many different commercial uses. The process captures 20% to 30% of the available carbon in the feedstock and sequesters it for thousands of years, furthering the goals of greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction. The innovative conversion process operates at high throughput levels and produces very low emissions because the gasses are combusted in the controlled combustion zone. The 6040 redesign addresses performance related issues experienced in the original design and represents the knowledge of the applications that Tigercat engineers and field support personnel have gained over the past five years. Great care has been taken to create a machine that allows modular replacement over time. For instance, the grates in the carbonizing chamber are now made up of seven different sections that can be rotated 180 degrees to balance wear and extend life. Individual sections can be replaced as required. The undercarriage, auger trough, and conveyor system are all bolt-on sections to the main carbonizing chamber frame. Everything can be separated for service and replacement if required. The modular bolt-on design also allows for differing expansion rates of these major components. The replaceable thermal-ceramic panel seal plate design has been improved, reducing panel wear. The composition of the panels has been altered to decrease back-face temperature while storing and utilizing more of the heat energy produced during the carbonizing process. This provides a more stable and sustained temperature within the carbonizing chamber. The result is increased efficiency, higher infeed rates, reduced emissions, and a greater yield of higher quality organic carbon. The auger trough is designed for minimal air leakage, assisting with under-air efficiency, further defining the secondary combustion zone, while reducing hotspots that could form from an inefficient base pressure or vacuum. Unlike the 6050, the auger trough, where the quenching process takes place, is entirely sealed. Once the organic carbon drops through the grates, it is fully quenched by the water bath. An onboard hydraulic water supply pump and integrated automatic water level control system reduces water consumption by about 50% compared with the 6050. Automated water fill, level control, and water retention provides the operator a window of time to replenish the water supply if required. The adjustable conveyor simplifies handling and management of the organic carbon product. It pivots 105 degrees from side to side and can be raised or lowered. The conveyor easily folds for transport and does not have to be detached from the machine frame. Temperature control sensors are located throughout the machine. This, coupled with the Tigercat designed operating software and telematics system, improves data access and customer support. The 6040 developments also emphasized parts commonality among other Tigercat products including pumps, motors, valves and filters, simplifying parts inventory management at the dealer and end user level. The overall machine weight has been reduced from 43,550 kg to 37,650 kg. Extended track frames improve load distribution on the trailer and reduce soil compaction on the ground.

FAO training boosts forest data collection in Southeast Asia

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:58
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has shared the latest tools and techniques to support data collection from satellite imagery for monitoring forests with experts across Southeast Asia, including for the subregion’s mangroves. Source: Timberbiz Participants will contribute to the Remote Sensing Survey of FAO’s 2025 Global Forest Resources Assessment (FRA), which provides essential information for understanding the extent of forest resources, their condition, management and uses across the globe. Experts from Bhutan, Cambodia, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Malaysia, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, Thailand and Viet Nam attended the training week from 24 to 28 June 2024 in Bangkok, which was organized with the assistance of the European Union and Norway’s International Climate and Forest Initiative. Trainers provided an overview of methodology, implementation and definitions as well as lessons on the physics of remote sensing, theory of photo interpretation and utilizing FAO’s dedicated platform, Collect Earth Online (CEO), for data collection. “The extensive field knowledge of the region’s experts is essential for better capturing complex land-use change patterns in Southeast Asia, such as shifting cultivation,” said Adolfo Kindgard, FAO Forestry Officer. Experts also compared satellite images from the FRA 2025 Remote Sensing Survey with the actual conditions on the ground in the Royal Thai Army Nature Study Center, Bang Pu, Samut Prakan Province, for further practical instruction in image interpretation, with a special focus on Bang Pu’s mangroves. As of 2020, nearly 44% (6.48 million hectares) of the total global area of mangroves (14.8 million hectares) is found in South and Southeast Asia, which also hosts the highest mangrove species diversity. However, this subregion also has the highest rate of net mangrove loss due to primary drivers such as the conversion to aquaculture and agriculture, losing 0.11% of mangrove cover per year from 2010 to 2020. Mangroves provide hundreds of millions of people living along coastal areas with services such as protection from natural disasters, timber and non/wood forest products, and pollution control. They also protect and conserve biodiversity by providing homes, breeding grounds and food for diverse types of animals, and are key to combating climate change through carbon storage.  

Scion projects collaborating with US and UK researchers

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:57
Two Scion research projects have been awarded Catalyst: Seeding funding for projects in collaboration with United States and United Kingdom research organisations. Source: Timberbiz Principal scientists Dr Michael Watt and Dr Brian Richardson were behind the successful projects which will both run for two years and involve international exchanges. Catalyst: Seeding facilitates pre-research strategic partnerships to develop into full collaborations. The fund covers expenses related to travel, workshops, accommodation, and some research. Fourteen of the 94 applications in the recent funding round were successful. Scion received two of these. Dr Richardson’s project is titled New models to underpin the potential of precision aerial agrichemical application. It aims to develop a new generation of aerial agrichemical modelling tools. Existing models for aerial application of agrichemicals like fertiliser and pesticides do not have the resolution needed to support highly accurate unmanned aerial spraying systems (UASS). The project team wants to develop new modelling tools to help transition aerial agrichemical application to precision technologies like UASS. The new tools will balance enhanced environmental protection with the need for cost-effective pest management and primary production systems, reduce agrichemical use and increase precision and improve results. The project is in collaboration with the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service (ARS). ARS manages a spray application simulation model released in the late 1980s and the project will develop a new and enduring collaboration between ARS and Scion. This collaboration will underpin the development of new models and facilitate knowledge exchanges. The project has been awarded funds over two years to facilitate a workshop in Houston, Texas involving Scion, ARS researchers and other collaborators, as well as exchanges to contribute to developing a research program to advance the science behind a new model. Alongside Dr Richardson, Tara Strand, Wayne Schou and Justin Nairn are the other Scion staff who will go to Texas, while Scion will host Harold Thistle, Heping Zhu, Stephen Foster and Bradley Fritz from ARS. Other potential collaborators will also be invited to attend this first workshop. It will ultimately lead to more cost-effective use of agrichemicals, less off-target drift, new tools to sustain productivity, improved management options and more cost-effective regulatory processes. Dr Watt’s project is titled Simulating wind and disease risk using digital twins in New Zealand forests. It explores how to mitigate wind risk and damage in key New Zealand plantation species using wind-risk models combined with a digital twin. Scion will collaborate with Forest Research in Roslin, United Kingdom on the project, drawing on their expertise constructing digital twins. Advanced wind-risk models from Forest Research will be integrated into digital twin models of forests to explore how things like varied plantation layout and stand density can mitigate wind risk in two key plantation species in New Zealand. The digital twin approach will also be used to simulate the impact of disease on growth and how this interacts with wind risk and stand structure. This could be used to guide specific management changes that could lead to disease resilience. The project was awarded $60,000 over two years to facilitate Scion hosting two visits from Dr Juan Suarez and Tom Locatelli from Forest Research and sending Remote Sensing and GIS scientists Michael and Nicolo Camarretta to Forest Research to develop models. Scion will draw on Forest Research’s expertise in digital twin construction through the project to develop a common methodology applicable to both NZ and the UK.  

Castra Falls goes from Sustainable Timber Tas to the Central Cost Council

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:57
Through a collaboration between the Central Coast Council and Sustainable Timber Tasmania, the future of Castra Falls has been confirmed for the benefit of the local community. Source: Timberbiz The Central Coast Council has signed a lease agreement with Sustainable Timber Tasmania, allocating responsibility for the care and management of Castra Falls and its surrounding area, totalling approximately 48 hectares, to the Council. This arrangement establishes the area as a public recreational reserve for the community’s enjoyment. Situated on Permanent Timber Production Zone land managed by Sustainable Timber Tasmania, the area’s lease spans ten years, granting the Central Coast Council the option for renewal to maintain ongoing stewardship. Mayor Cheryl Fuller of the Central Coast Council expressed her delight with the favourable outcome, emphasising the Council’s appreciation for Sustainable Timber Tasmania’s willingness to consider the lease and collaborate in this partnership. Mayor Fuller said she recently walked the Castra Falls circuit with CEO Barry Omundson and members of the North West Walking Club. “Castra Falls is a very special place that holds important natural values.” “Five waterfalls and an abundance of wildlife and flora are just a few of the many reasons why this place is so highly valued and appreciated by the community.” “The area forms part of the Coast to Canyon Pathway alongside Leven Canyon and Preston Falls, all of which are extraordinary places and enjoyed by both residents and visitors.” “I will be reaching out to those who have voiced their concerns to me regarding the area and look forward to providing further details about next steps and keeping the community informed,” said Mayor Fuller. Sustainable Timber Tasmania has confirmed that it has no plans to conduct forest operations at Castra Falls and is pleased with this positive outcome for the Central Coast community. Suzette Weeding, Sustainable Timber Tasmania’s General Manager Conservation and Land Management said the organisation is proud to continue providing value to local communities as the manager of Tasmania’s public production forests. Ms Weeding highlighted that “Sustainable Timber Tasmania understands the significance of Castra Falls as an important location for the local community and visitors to explore and enjoy.”

Auto Quick Coupler demo at Loggabull

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:56
A field demonstration of the Auto Hydraulic Quick Coupler was held recently at Loggabull’s harvesting operation in Kinleith Forest on New Zealand’s north island, showing how one machine and operator can carry out multiple tasks. Source: Timberbiz This project and field demonstration of the Automated Quick Coupler was part of the FGR Automation & Robotics Primary Growth Partnership led by FGR Program Manager Keith Raymond. This project developed an Automatic Quick Coupler for rapid changeover of machine attachments without the operator having to leave the cab. Using the Automatic Quick Coupler with multiple attachments, only one based machine is required for log processing, sorting and loading, resulting in reduced capital cost, higher machine utilisation and lower operating costs. The Quick Coupler is suited to lower production operations where there is spare capacity. The demonstration was positively received and attended by close to 60 attendees, from forest management companies and logging contractors from both corporate and woodlot scenarios, who saw the huge potential and advantages of what the Quick Coupler provides. Anyone interested in purchasing the demo machine with attachments can contact Phillip McKenzie at AB Equipment Ltd, Taupo phil.mckenzie@abequipment.co.nz  

HQP’s community event to showcase forestry on the Fraser Coast

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:56
On Saturday 20 July HQP will hold its Fraser Coast Plantation Community Day to show what it takes to grow a sustainable forest. Source: Timberbiz HQP’s pine plantations on the Fraser Coast are among the biggest in the southern hemisphere and grow up to 10 million seedling a year. Local houses are built from renewable timber that’s grown and milled locally. Growing for generations supports a thriving economy of large and small local businesses and their employees including sawmills, civil construction, hauliers, harvesters, scientists, foresters, fire fighters, nursery workers and labourers even helicopters pilots and drone operators. This work is mostly done quietly and unseen, but on 20 July, with help from industry and community partners, it will be on display at the Toolara Forest Office on Tin Can Bay Road from 9am until 2pm. You’ll see every aspect of the plantation lifecycle and some of the machines and technology used from seedling to sawmill on display from HQP and: Wood processors and major employers Hyne Timber and Laminex Harvest and hauliers Sunchip, Ashers and GMT Logging Roading construction contractors including McKenna’s Silviculture operators who undertake planting and maintenance such as K&S Contracting, Crossing Works, Butchulla Indigenous Industries Group and Wide Bay Drones Other suppliers including EXCI artificial intelligence fire detection Local First Nations groups Kabi Kabi Peoples Aboriginal Corporation and Butchulla Native Title Aboriginal Corporation, current and traditional custodians Community and environment partners including local rural fire brigades, Mary River Catchment Coordinating Committee, Gympie Landcare, Glenwood Wildlife Awareness and Cooloola Nature.

Virtual invitations into the forest

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:55
FWPA is excited to provide opportunities to enhance engagement on the sustainable nature of forestry at industry events by using virtual reality (VR) to transport attendees into the heart of the forest. Source: Timberbiz Six new VR headsets have been made available for use by stakeholders to provide immersive experiences during events including conferences, trade shows and career expos. Using the award-winning suite of ForestVRTM resources the headsets take users on virtual tours of a variety of Australian forest and processing mill environments, as well as guiding them along the timber product supply chain from seed to shelter. Developed by FWPA’s ForestLearning program, the ForestVRTM resources have already made an impressive impact on teachers and students in Australian classrooms. Now they are proving equally as popular at industry events, having been met with enthusiasm from attendees at the recent Balingup Small Farm Field Day in Western Australia, Mid Coast Careers Market in New South Wales, and Royal Darwin Show in the Northern Territory. The headsets are available on loan, free-of charge through ForestLearning. They don’t require a Wi-Fi connection, meaning they offer an easy and effective way to engage with attendees in any setting. Beth Welden, ForestLearning Program Manager, said ForestVRTM is the perfect way to share the unique story of Australian sustainable forestry. “These highly immersive experiences guide the user through the forest and timber processing journey, showcasing the use of renewable forest products in everything from buildings to everyday items such as paper,” Ms Welden said. “We have already helped countless students Australia-wide to appreciate the complexity and breadth of our sustainable forest management systems, and we’re looking forward to helping industry bring the vibrant world of forestry and wood products to life for even more Australians.”More information on the ForestVRTM resources can be found at https://forestlearning.edu.au/forestvr/ Industry members interested in borrowing a headset to use at an upcoming event are invited to make a request by filling out at form at https://forms.monday.com/forms/d4f6792b9bc7195b69a5aa5969b67971?r=use1

Forico’s new gen logstackers commissioned in Tasmania

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:55
Forico has purchased two New Generation Wagner L90 Logstackers for its mills in northern Tasmania, the first of the new generation machines to be commissioned in Australia. Source: Timberbiz The two new ‘Wagners’ arrived at Long Reach Mill in the East Tamar and Surrey Hills Mill in Hampshire, Tasmania in May 2024. After assembly and training by the North American manufacturer Allied Systems and specialist cargo handling company Quality Marshalling of New Zealand, the machines were commissioned and put into use in the log-yards in early June. Recognising the need to update their fleet, the Forico Board had approved the purchase in April 2022, a significant capital expenditure outlay and investment in supply chain. The machines in use until that time had been purchased in 2015 and had been in service for in excess of 26,000 hours. “The Wagners are also considerably more fuel efficient and have lower overall maintenance costs compared to front end loader machines used over the same operating period,” said Tim Duncombe, manager at Forico’s Long Reach Mill. The New Generation L90s were transported from America by sea and road after a lead time of around 18 months on delivery due to demand for machines and worldwide challenges on the availability of components. Making the journey from Portland USA to Melbourne, on to the port at Devonport and then on to the mill sites by road, the unique machines would have caused some ‘head scratching’ as they were driven under escort to their final destination, said Mr Duncombe. Manager at Forico’s Surrey Hills Mill Paul Sturzaker said the operational teams had identified the need for additional handrailing to protect operators exiting the cab, but beyond that the newly designed Wagner unit would significantly improve visibility and handling.

Rob de Fégely retires

Australian timber industry news - Mo, 01/07/2024 - 02:54
Rob de Fégely, co-founder and director of Margules Groome, retired on 30 June 2024. Source: Timberbiz Mr de Fégely’s career in consulting began in the 1980s when he joined Ray Margules, a pioneer in forestry consulting in Australia. Over the past four decades he undertook a countless number of consulting assignments for both the private sector in Australia and government with a keen interest in strategy and policy. Apart from consulting in recent years Mr de Fégely was appointed Chair of the Board of Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT, formerly Forestry Tasmania), he is also an Advisory Board member of the Forestry Investment Trust of the Alberta Investment Management Corporation in Canada, and as a Board member of Forestry Corporation of New South Wales (FCNSW). Mr de Fégely has held several notable positions, including Chair of the Commonwealth Government’s Forest Industry Advisory Council (FIAC) from 2015 to 2023, National President of Forestry Australia (formerly the Institute of Foresters of Australia) from 2012 to 2017, and Non-Executive Director of VicForests from 2012 to 2015. He was the founding Chair of Cape York Timber, an indigenous-based sawmilling enterprise in far north Queensland. Furthermore, he has advised Greening Australia, the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, and the NSW Natural Resources Commission. With more than 40 years of experience, Mr de Fégely has worked on projects across Australia and throughout most of the Asia-Pacific region. Throughout his career, he has been passionate about promoting sustainable forestry practices and advocating for the forestry profession. He has also contributed to the education and training of future forestry professionals and capacity building within the sector.

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