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Answer

The native forestry industry is not only in structural decline, but it is also operating in a way that undermines or harms other industries in the South West, including forest-based tourism, which already supports thousands of local jobs in WA.

Lewin Karri forest clearfelling  (Image: WA Forest Alliance)

WA’s regrowth forests are now worth more standing thanks to WAs growing nature-based tourism industry. In 2016-17 South West tourism accounted for one in five (19.5%) of people employed in the region and contributed $1.88 billion to the economy.

WA also has the healthiest bee populations and the healthiest honey in the world. Beekeeping is integral to WA’s agricultural industry. Pollination that bees provide is estimated to be worth $800m-$1.4bn a year to the agricultural sector.

Many existing sustainable and profitable forest-based enterprises, including honey production and nature-based tourism operators, are now calling for forests to be conserved to secure their productivity and allow these enterprises to grow.

Monastery Landing on the Frankland River near Nornalup. (Image: Gary Muir)

Native forest logging is a significant driver of climate change, but protected forests are a critical ally in our efforts to avert dangerous climate change. Protecting WA’s native forests from logging has the potential to prevent 40-60 million tonnes of CO2 from being emitted over 10-years.

Plantation development has been in decline nationally and in WA since 2007/8. There have been no new softwood plantings over the last decade, and in some areas, mature plantations have been clear-felled with no subsequent replanting. Expanding our plantation resource through farm forestry is one of the best prospects for large scale employment and carbon drawdown.

The proposal

Clean State strongly endorses the implementation of the Forests For Life proposal, including:

1. Establishing a World Class Timber industry through Farm Forestry and Landcare, growing 40,000 hectares of high value, fast growing trees for saw logs within existing farming land.

2. Building two new processing facilities for engineered wood products and prefabricated structural applications in the Great Southern and South West.

3. Supporting local industries in nature-based tourism and honey production.

4. Protecting High Conservation Value forests by securing them as National Parks for water, wildlife, climate and cultural benefits.

In addition, Clean State proposes the following supporting measures to unlock the potential job creation opportunities associated with a shift to sustainable forest management.

5. Develop a management plan for WA’s native forest estate with a focus around supporting sustainable employment opportunities in carbon credits, sustainable tourism, indigenous fire management, honey production and other sustainable industries.

6. Change the purpose and scope of the Forest Products Commission to focus on supporting sustainable ‘forest product’ industries such as those mentioned above, rather than a sole focus on the extraction of timber and fibre products.

7. Establish a forest carbon certification method for Southwest native forests and seek certification under the Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) certification scheme.

8. Establish a forest carbon research centre in Manjimup in partnership with a leading university.

9. Partner with the Forest Products Commission to establish a sustainable timber building materials production, research, training and innovation hub in Collie focussed on production and utilisation of sustainable plantation timber resources and farm forestry products.

10. Provide free retraining for existing native forest timber industry workers in sustainable plantation management and forest carbon management.

11. Invest in joint management of High Conservation Value forests in the Southwest with Traditional Owners.

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