John Brink is angry about the ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ government’s decision to allocate 10 per cent of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½'s annual allowable cut to the value-added forest sector.
The owner of Brink Forest Products says the allocation should be 10 times the 600,000 cubic metres the province intends to reserve for secondary manufacturers.
"If it is 600,000 cubic metres annually that is nothing, that is not even the size of a regular sawmill," Brink said. “That means the government has said, ‘We don’t want value-added manufacturing.’ If you do not have reasonable expectation of access to fibre, why would anybody invest in value-added manufacturing?”
ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ Timber Sales controls between six million and eight million cubic metres of timber, which represents about 20 per cent of the annual allowable cut, and Brink says all of that should be made available to value-added bidders.
He predicts the restricted timber supply available will cripple value-added businesses and deter investment in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½
“There is not much left of the value-added sector in British Columbia, virtually none left in northern ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½,” Brink said. “There are three or four companies here (in northern B.C) and I’d be surprised if there’s two left in a couple months from now.”
In the mid-1990s, when Brink was founding president of the BC Council of Value-Added Wood Processors, there were eight associations and 800 member companies, two-thirds of which are no longer operating.
Forests Minister Bruce Raltson made Tuesday. The government says the 10 per cent allocation for secondary forestry licensees to bid on is an initial offering and more volume is expected in the future.
Tuesday’s announcement comes a week after , a $90 million program to prop up the struggling forest industry. Brink says the fund is more to help forestry workers transition from layoffs due to mill closures and he has no intention of applying for any government funding.