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The lumber industry is a major natural resource-based industry around the world. Trees are harvested, for a variety of purposes, in the majority of countries. This chapter focuses on the processing of wood in order to produce solid wood boards and manufactured boards in sawmills and related settings. The term manufactured boards is used to refer to lumber composed of wood elements of varying sizes, from veneers down to fibres, which are held together by either additive chemical adhesives or “natural” chemical bonds. The relationship between the various types of manufactured boards is displayed in figure 1. Because of differences in process and associated hazards, manufactured boards are divided here into three categories: plywood, particleboard and fibreboard. The term particleboard is used to refer to any sheet material manufactured from small pieces of wood such as chips, flakes, splinters, strands or shreds, while the term fibreboard is used for all panels produced from wood fibres, including hardboard, medium-density fibreboard (MDF) and insulation board. The other major industrial use for wood is the manufacture of paper and related products, which is covered in the chapter Pulp and paper industry.

Figure 1. Classification of manufactured boards by particle size, density and process type.

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The sawmill industry has existed in simple forms for hundreds of years, although significant advances in sawmill technology have been made this century by the introduction of electric power, improvements in saw design and, most recently, the automation of sorting and other operations. The basic techniques for making plywood have also existed for many centuries, but the term plywood did not enter into common usage until the 1920s, and its manufacture did not become commercially important until this century. The other manufactured board industries, including particleboard, waferboard, oriented strandboard, insulation board, medium-density fibreboard and hardboard, are all relatively new industries which first became commercially important after the                                                                                                                         Second World War.

Solid wood and manufactured boards may be produced from a wide variety of tree species. Species are selected on the basis of the shape and size of the tree, the physical characteristics of the wood itself, such as strength or resistance to decay, and the aesthetic qualities of the wood. Hardwood is the common name given to broad-leaved trees, which are classified botanically as angiosperms, while softwood is the common name given to conifers, which are classified botanically as gymnosperms. Many hardwoods and some softwoods which grow in tropical regions are commonly referred to as tropical or exotic woods. Although the majority of wood harvested worldwide (58% by volume) is from non-conifers, much of this is consumed as fuel, so that the majority used for industrial purposes (69%) is from conifers (FAO 1993). This may in part reflect the distribution of forests in relation to industrial development. The largest softwood forests are located in the northern regions of North America, Europe and Asia, while the major hardwood forests are located in both tropical and temperate regions.

Almost all wood destined for use in the manufacture of wood products and structures is first processed in sawmills. Thus, sawmills exist in all regions of the world where wood is used for industrial purposes. Table 1 presents 1990 statistics regarding the volume of wood harvested for fuel and industrial purposes in the major wood-producing countries on each continent, as well as volumes harvested for saw and veneer logs, a sub-category of industrial wood and the raw material for the industries described in this chapter. In developed countries the majority of wood harvested is used for industrial purposes, which includes wood used for saw and veneer logs, pulpwood, chips, particles and residues. In 1990, three countries—the United States, the former USSR and Canada - produced over half of the world’s total industrial wood as well as over half of the logs destined for saw and veneer mills. However, in many of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and South America the majority of wood harvested is used for fuel.

Table 1. Estimated wood production in 1990 (1,000 m3)

 

Wood used for
fuel or charcoal

Total wood used for
industrial purposes
1

Saw and veneer logs

NORTH AMERICA

137,450

613,790

408,174

United States

82,900

426,900

249,200

Canada

6,834

174,415

123,400

Mexico

22,619

7,886

5,793

EUROPE

49,393

345,111

202,617

Germany

4,366

80,341

21,655

Sweden

4,400

49,071

22,600

Finland

2,984

40,571

18,679

France

9,800

34,932

23,300

Austria

2,770

14,811

10,751

Norway

549

10,898

5,322

United Kingdom

250

6,310

3,750

FORMER USSR

81,100

304,300

137,300

ASIA

796,258

251,971

166,508

China

188,477

91,538

45,303

Malaysia

6,902

40,388

39,066

Indonesia

136,615

29,315

26,199

Japan

103

29,300

18,377

India

238,268

24,420

18,350

SOUTH AMERICA

192,996

105,533

58,592

Brazil

150,826

74,478

37,968

Chile

6,374

12,060

7,401

Colombia

13,507

2,673

1,960

AFRICA

392,597

58,412

23,971

South Africa

7,000

13,008

5,193

Nigeria

90,882

7,868

5,589

Cameroon

10,085

3,160

2,363

Cote d’Ivoire

8,509

2,903

2,146

OCEANIA

8,552

32,514

18,534

Australia

7,153

17,213

8,516

New Zealand

50

11,948

6,848

Papua New Guinea

5,533

2,655

2,480

WORLD

1,658,297

1,711,629

935,668

1 Includes wood used for saw and veneer logs, pulpwood, chips, particles and residues.

Source: FAO 1993.

Table 2 lists the world’s major producers of solid wood lumber, plywood, particleboard and fibreboard. The three largest producers of industrial wood overall also account for over half of world production of solid wood boards, and rank among the top five in each of the manufactured board categories. The volume of manufactured boards produced worldwide is relatively small compared to the volume of solid wood boards, but the manufactured board industries are growing at a faster rate. While the production of solid wood boards increased by 13% between 1980 and 1990, the volumes of plywood, particleboard and fibreboard increased by 21%, 25% and 19%, respectively.

Table 2. Estimated production of lumber by sector for the 10 largest world producers (1,000 m3)

Solid wood boards

 

Plywood boards

 

Particleboard

 

Fibreboard

 

Country

Volume

Country

Volume

Country

Volume

Country

Volume

USA

109,800

USA

18,771

Germany

7,109

USA

6,438

Former USSR

105,000

Indonesia

7,435

USA

6,877

Former USSR

4,160

Canada

54,906

Japan

6,415

Former USSR

6,397

China

1,209

Japan

29,781

Canada

1,971

Canada

3,112

Japan

923

China

23,160

Former USSR

1,744

Italy

3,050

Canada

774

India

17,460

Malaysia

1,363

France

2,464

Brazil

698

Brazil

17,179

Brazil

1,300

Belgium-Luxembourg

2,222

Poland

501

Germany

14,726

China

1,272

Spain

1,790

Germany

499

Sweden

12,018

Korea

1,124

Austria

1,529

New Zealand

443

France

10,960

Finland

643

United Kingdom

1,517

Spain

430

World

505,468

World

47,814

World

50,388

World

20,248

Source: FAO 1993.

The proportion of workers in the entire workforce employed in wood products industries is generally 1% or less, even in countries with a large forest industry, such as the United States (0.6%), Canada (0.9%), Sweden (0.8%), Finland (1.2%), Malaysia (0.4%), Indonesia (1.4%) and Brazil (0.4%) (ILO 1993). While some sawmills may be located near urban areas, most tend to be located near the forests that supply their logs, and many are located in small, often isolated communities where they may be the only major source of employment and the most important component of the local economy.

Hundreds of thousands of workers are employed in the lumber industry worldwide, although exact international figures are difficult to estimate. In the United States in 1987 there were 180,000 sawmill and planer mill workers, 59,000 plywood workers and 18,000 workers employed in the production of particleboard and fibreboard (Bureau of the Census 1987). In Canada in 1991 there were 68,400 sawmill and planer mill workers and 8,500 plywood workers (Statistics Canada 1993). Even though wood production is increasing, the number of sawmill workers is decreasing due to mechanization and automation. The number of sawmill and planer mill workers in the United States was 17% higher in 1977 than in 1987, and in Canada there were 13% more in 1986 than in 1991. Similar reductions have been observed in other countries, such as Sweden, where smaller, less efficient operations are being eliminated in favour of mills with much larger capacities and modern equipment. The majority of jobs eliminated have been lower-skilled jobs, such as those involving the manual sorting or feeding of lumber.

 

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