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Underwater logging: submarine rediscovers lost wood.


The global market for industrial wood products (including wood and paper) is a $400 billion industry, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 From Trends in Industrial Roundwood Roundwood (Irish: An Tochar, meaning The Causeway) is a village in County Wicklow, Ireland. It was listed as having a population of 518 in the census of 2002.  Production and Consumption, a 2001 report from the World Resources Institute Founded in 1982, the World Resources Institute (WRI) is an environmental think tank based in Washington, D.C. WRI is an independent, non-partisan and nonprofit organization with a staff of more than 100 scientists, economists, policy experts, business analysts, statistical . The report notes that real prices for timber rose 30% between 1975 and 1996, an increase that author Emily Matthews says indicates that demand is growing faster than supply. Worldwide demand for wood products is expected to grow steadily, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Noun 1. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - the United Nations agency concerned with the international organization of food and agriculture
FAO, Food and Agriculture Organization
. As the world's thirst for wood grows and the resulting deforestation deforestation

Process of clearing forests. Rates of deforestation are particularly high in the tropics, where the poor quality of the soil has led to the practice of routine clear-cutting to make new soil available for agricultural use.
 contributes to a wide range of environmental problems, one enterprising group has gone to a surprising location to search for more sustainable wood supplies--under the water.

A great amount of timber sank during log drives or was flooded during the construction of hydroelectric dams around the world. Although under water, the trees may be as good as new. One obvious--but dangerous and expensive--way to retrieve this "rediscovered wood" is to hire divers to run underwater saws. A second solution, uprooting the trees with a chain, mucks up the water and disrupts aquatic ecosystems.

Now Triton Logging, a firm in British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography
, has come up with a third alternative: the Sawfish sawfish: see ray.
sawfish

Any of about six species (genus Pristis, family Pristidae) of sharklike ray. Sawfishes have a long head, long body, and a long, toothed, bladelike snout. The largest attain lengths of 23 ft (7 m) or more.
. This remotely piloted submarine--named for a relative of the shark that has a beak like a giant hedge trimmer--sports a long, electric-powered chain saw. Triton president Chris Godsall, who has a master's degree master's degree
n.
An academic degree conferred by a college or university upon those who complete at least one year of prescribed study beyond the bachelor's degree.

Noun 1.
 in business and sustainability, had worked salvaging individual sunken logs when he realized there was more to gain by salvaging whole drowned forests. The Sawfish, he says, represents "an arranged marriage The purpose of an arranged marriage is to form a new family unit by marriage while respecting the chastity of all people involved. As suggested by the term, an arranged marriage is typically arranged by someone other than the persons getting married, curtailing or avoiding the  of marine and logging technologies" that may offer a sustainable way to reduce the environmental impacts of logging and the attendant road building.

Underwater Logging Underwater logging is the process of logging trees from underwater forests. When artificial reservoirs and dams are built, large areas of forest are often inundated; although the trees die, the wood is often preserved. : Tough, but not Impossible

Underwater logging is possible because many submerged trees and logs are barely affected by their decades of submersion submersion

the act of placing, or the condition of being under, the surface of a liquid.
. Lake and river water is often too cold and too deficient in oxygen for decay organisms to survive. (Ironically, the above-water portion of trees often must be discarded due to degradation by sunlight and microorganisms.)

Studies of logs raised from Lake Superior show slight color changes, but "the properties are virtually the same as modern timber," says Terry Mace, who has studied underwater log retrieval for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) is an agency of the state of Wisconsin. Its purpose is to preserve, protect, manage and maintain the natural resources of the state[1]. . And although sugars have leached from the Lake Superior logs, this effectively seasons the wood, making it highly desirable for use in musical instruments.

It's hard to pinpoint how many trees are available for underwater logging. Some underwater logs were sunk or otherwise lost during log drives on rivers, but the majority came from forests submerged during the building of dams. The number of large dams--those more than 15 meters high--has increased nearly sevenfold sevenfold
Adjective

1. having seven times as many or as much

2. composed of seven parts

Adverb

by seven times as many or as much

Adj. 1.
 since 1950, reported the World Resources Institute in World Resources 2000-2001. And while dam building has decreased sharply in developed countries due to environmental considerations and a lack of good sites, it does continue elsewhere. Godsall estimates that about 35,000 square kilometers of forest worldwide have already been submerged by dams. In British Columbia alone, he says, about 20 million trees lay underwater.

Although all that submerged timber seems like a waste, Godsall says the schedule and economics of dam building are to blame--the trees are considered expendable, and the costs of removing them are too high. Further, he says, "if you were to clear two hundred square miles of forest, where would it go? Could you cut it economically? Cost-benefit analyses done time and time again, [in Canada], in the States, in Russia, in Brazil, or Southeast Asia Southeast Asia, region of Asia (1990 est. pop. 442,500,000), c.1,740,000 sq mi (4,506,600 sq km), bounded roughly by the Indian subcontinent on the west, China on the north, and the Pacific Ocean on the east.  focus on [generation of] electricity, not logs, and the result is flooded forests."

One Sharp Fish

The Sawfish is 6 feet high, nearly 12 feet long, and 6 feet wide; it weighs 7,700 pounds. The craft is tethered Attached to a data or power source by wire or fiber. Contrast with untethered.  to a cable carrying electric power, video feeds, and control circuits. A sonar system and eight onboard video cameras allow the sub to "fly very easily through the lake, without touching the lake floor," says Godsall.

Staying off the bottom reduces the amount of silt that gets suspended in the water, Godsall says. He adds, "We don't think we can sell a wood product that has some environmental benefits for terrestrial forests while fouling the aquatic environment. And we don't like turbidity turbidity /tur·bid·i·ty/ (ter-bid´i-te) cloudiness; disturbance of solids (sediment) in a solution, so that it is not clear.tur´bid
Turbidity
The cloudiness or lack of transparency of a solution.
, which interferes with our visibility."

The operator works in a control booth on a barge, directing the robot to the base of a standing tree. A hydraulically powered grapple (driven by vegetable oil, not hydraulic fluid hydraulic fluid

toxic because of its high content of industrial triaryl phosphate.
) grabs the tree, and the sub screws a large air bladder air bladder, in fish: see swim bladder.  to the trunk and inflates it. After the Sawfish saws the trunk with its 40-horsepower electric chain saw, the bladder lifts the tree to the surface. Workers then remove the bladder and the tree's limbs. In three hours, the Sawfish can cut 37 trees.

The logs are then sent to a conventional lumber mill for processing. Although the drowned trees contain more moisture than living trees, the lumber can be air- or kiln-dried with little trouble, according to Triton.

Triton is progressing toward certification under the Rediscovered Wood underwater salvage standards established by SmartWood, a nonprofit environmental program of the Rainforest Alliance The Rainforest Alliance is a non-governmental organization (NGO) founded in 1987. In is based in New York, United States.

Their stated mission is to protect ecosystems and the people and wildlife that depend on them by transforming land-use practices, business practices and
 that began assessing the environmental, social, and economic impact of forestry operations in 1989. SmartWood assessors evaluate the negative and positive effects of an operation on the environment: what types of fluids and chemicals are used in the machine (in case there is a hose break), whether the operation creates a disturbance at the lake bottom, whether sediment is being disturbed, whether there is shoreline erosion where the logs are being removed, and whether the waterway is improving or worsening because of the operation.

The assessor then scores each criterion within the principal standards. A weak performance will result in conditions that must be met by the company before certification is granted. SmartWood also requests monitoring by the company of the environmental impact that the salvage operation 1. The recovery, evacuation, and reclamation of damaged, discarded, condemned, or abandoned allied or enemy materiel, ships, craft, and floating equipment for reuse, repair, refabrication, or scrapping.
2.
 has, and will ask to see the results of the monitoring during annual on-site audits, which are a requirement of certification.

Cost versus Benefits

In logging, as in all natural resource industries, the cost of raw materials is critical, and the success of underwater wood will probably depend on economics, says Eugene Wengert, a forest products industry consultant and retired professor of forest ecology Forest ecology is the scientific study of patterns and processes in forests. The management of forests is known as forestry. Forest Ecosystem
Scope of Forest Ecology
 and management from the University of Wisconsin-Madison “University of Wisconsin” redirects here. For other uses, see University of Wisconsin (disambiguation).
A public, land-grant institution, UW-Madison offers a wide spectrum of liberal arts studies, professional programs, and student activities.
. The question, he says, is whether those trees are cheaper to cut than fresh ones. "Logging and sawmilling are not done because we really love it," he says. "They are done to make a profit."

Companies such as Timeless Timber of Ashland, Wisconsin, recover logs that sank during log drives on rivers as much as a century ago. The process of raising these river logs is expensive, so the company charges a premium for its wood, limiting its market to customers who appreciate the wood's historic and environmental value.

But Godsall maintains that the Sawfish is not necessarily more expensive than normal cutting. "There should not be a premium on owning a thing you believe in," he says. "Ninety-nine percent of everything that comes out of [a submerged] forest goes into established markets [at normal market prices]." At the same time, flooded forests can also contain some premium wood, he adds.

Triton is entering the regular market for so-called saw logs (logs large enough to mill into lumber), Godsall says. The company's present output, mainly strong, desirable Douglas fir, is sold to mills making lumber for flooring, furniture, and construction. In August 2003 the first Sawfish began cutting trees in Lois Lake, British Columbia, a dam impoundment An action taken by the president in which he or she proposes not to spend all or part of a sum of money appropriated by Congress.

The current rules and procedures for impoundment were created by the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C.A.
 built in the 1930s to power a sawmill sawmill, installation or facility in which cut logs are sawed into standard-sized boards and timbers. The saws used in such an installation are generally of three types: the circular saw, which consists of a disk with teeth around its edge; the band saw, which . A second Sawfish is under construction.

Given the enormous amount of flooded forestland for·est·land  
n.
A section of land covered with forest or set aside for the cultivation of forests.
, Triton plans to both use the Sawfish itself and sell the remote-controlled loggers to other companies at a cost of US$1 million and up. "There are millions and millions of trees underwater in our own backyard, and we're addressing those with our logging operations," says Godsall. "But there are underwater forests all around the world that are out of our reach."

The Environmental Payoff

Drowned logs, sunken trees, and wood from building demolition are all considered rediscovered wood. The environmental promise of using rediscovered wood is to reduce the impact of logging and the attendant road building on forests.

Roads allow an influx of invasive species, and they increase erosion and runoff to surface waters. And roads are very common in forests. According to a 2000 report from the National Center for Policy Analysis The National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) is an American non-profit conservative think tank. NCPA states that its goal is to develop and promote private alternatives to government regulation and control, solving problems by relying on the strength of the competitive,  titled Banning Roads, Burning Forests, the National Forest System has over 383,000 miles of roads--eight times the mileage of the interstate highway system--on its 192 million acres. Most of these roads were built for timber harvesting, but have since been adopted by recreational forest visitors.

But the environmental benefits of recovering drowned trees are difficult to compare to the standard of being "sustainable" because the trees are not replaced, even though other trees are being drowned by newer dams. Underwater logging can pose an environmental hazard if silt on the drowned logs is distributed into the water. Unlike sawing, the past practice of yanking standing trees from lake beds can pollute the water with sediment, blocking the light needed by aquatic plants.

Some in the forest products industry question the need for underwater logging, noting that forests have been expanding for about a century in the United States. Wengert argues that conventional logging itself may actually be sustainable. "No way are we running out of wood," he says. "We may be running out of some species, but since 1909, the supply of wood has been increasing [in the United States]. Most forests are sustainable, if you look widely enough. If you look at one county, maybe they will cut half the county. But if you look at a big enough area, [those trees are replaced elsewhere]." Unless it's developed, he says, forestland continues as forestland.

Perhaps, but Godsall argues that sustainable forestry is still a goal, not a reality, in the industry. "The industry has changed tremendously in the last ten years," he says. "We have seen a huge capacity building in forestry companies regarding environmental sustainability and responsible engagement [in social issues related to forestry]. But that capacity to understand the issues is not always converted into a collective approach to sustainable forestry."

SmartWood's William Timpano, who monitors the movement of certified wood through the production process so manufacturers can place SmartWood's Rediscovered Wood logo on their products, points out another benefit. "Since this volume of timber is not natural," he says, "taking the timber out may make for better fish habitat or increase the presence of naturally occurring aquatic fauna."

With underwater logging, every acre of drowned trees that is chain sawed in a hydroelectric reservoir should translate into an acre of forest that's left standing. And that, in turn, could translate into significant environmental benefits for the world.

Suggested Reading

Matthews E. 2001. From forests to floorboards: trends in industrial roundwood production and consumption. In: Earth Trends: The Environmental Information Portal [online database]. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute. Available: http://earthtrends.wri.org/ features/view_feature.cfm?theme=9&fid fid  
n.
1. Nautical A square bar used as a support for a topmast.

2. A large tapering pin used to open the strands of a rope before splicing.



[Origin unknown.]
=6 [accessed 7 October 2004].

Rainforest Alliance. SmartWood homepage. New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, NY: Rainforest Alliance. Available: http://www.rainforest-alliance.org.programs/forestry/smartwood/index.html [accessed 7 October 2004].

Zhu S, Tomberlin D, Buongiorno J. 1998. Global Forest Products Consumption, Production, Trade and Prices: Global Forest Products Model Projections to 2010. Global Forest Products Outlook Study. Working Paper No. GFPOS/WP/01. Rome, Italy: United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Available: http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/ 003/X1607E/X1607E00.htm [accessed 7 October 2004].
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Title Annotation:Environews / Innovations
Author:Tenenbaum, David J.
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:1960
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