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Extension to Tas RFA delivers 20 years of certainty for forest industries

MEDIA RELEASE

Extension to Tas RFA delivers 20 years of certainty for forest industries

The Australian Forest Products Association (AFPA) strongly welcomes today’s announcement from Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Tasmanian Premier Will Hodgman to extend the state’s Regional Forest Agreement (RFA) for a further 20 years, providing much-needed certainty for our industry which in turn will support jobs, investment and innovation.

AFPA CEO, Mr Ross Hampton, said the extension maintains the existing production forest area, and updates language in the agreement to better reflect the modern forest products industry.

“Today’s announcement is a major endorsement and recognition of our industry’s contribution to the Australian economy, with an annual turnover of $20 billion, directly supporting around 120,000 jobs across the whole value chain, and an additional 180,000 jobs through flow-on economic activity,” Mr Hampton said.

“We congratulate the Tasmanian and Federal Governments for acting decisively to extend the Tasmanian RFA and provide certainty to one of the state’s largest employers and a vital part of the national value chain – Tasmania accounts for 28 per cent of Australia’s native hardwood harvested by volume, and 20 per cent by value.”

Mr Hampton said the national RFA framework sought to balance environmental, social and economic considerations in the management of our forest estate, but while environmental objectives had been met and exceeded, certainty for industry had not been met.

“It is vital that we see a 20-year extension across all RFAs without further delays to provide the certainty of resource supply necessary for industry to remain competitive, encourage investment and innovation, and underpin jobs,” Mr Hampton said.

The previous RFA process resulted nationally in the transfer of more than 2 million hectares of forest to reserves, and subsequent decisions taken by states and territories have further increased the area of forests in reserves to around 3 million hectares.

In Tasmania, the RFA signing in 1997 (and the Tasmanian Community Forestry Agreement in 2005) resulted in a considerable increase in the state forest locked up in reserves, from 30.5 per cent of the state’s forest estate in 1996 to 1.5 million hectares – or around 50 per cent – today.

“Disappointingly, arbitrary decisions to reduce the area of production forests have occurred in all RFA regions in the past 20 years. In Tasmania, this been a massive hit on jobs in the industry, with the state’s forest industry almost halving from its peak of around 7000 direct jobs in 2008 to around 3600 today.

“AFPA will study the detail of the RFA extension, and we look forward to working with the Federal and other state governments to ensure that the RFA framework continues to deliver on all its objectives,” Mr Hampton said.

18.08.17 – AFPA MEDIA RELEASE – Extension to Tas RFA delivers 20 years of certainty for forest industries

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