In the News
Locally Produced Doug-Fir Framing Lumber Answers the Call for Green Building Products in OR
From FSC News and Views, April 2005
Three years ago the idea that several markets in Oregon would
have lumberyards that are making FSC certified building
materials available would have been a dream. Today, that
dream has come true and it has been made possible by the hard
work of manufacturers, suppliers, ‘green’
building programs, and other organizations.
One of the market drivers is ‘green’ building,
including both residential and commercial construction
projects. In Oregon, residential projects can earn
certification from Portland General Electric’s (PGE)
EarthAdvantage program and commercial projects can be
certified by the US Green Building Council’s (USGBC)
Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design (LEED)
program. Both green building programs go further than just
certifying buildings, they also offer education and
assistance to architects, designers, builders and other
professionals about new technologies, products, and design
applications. EarthAdvantage made FSC-certified wood an
integral part of its checklist for structural and interior
finishes. However, FSC-certified products were not readily
available when the EarthAdvantage checklist was originally
launched in 2001. Duane Woik, New Construction Consultant, of
EarthAdvantage has been a strong advocate for keeping FSC
certified wood in their program. He has communicated the
value of FSC to builders around the state in an effort to
create a ground swell of demand. Kent Goodyear, Director of
Market Connections at Ecotrust, has been working with Woik to
gauge and communicate this demand to forest landowners,
manufacturers, and suppliers.
Woik and Goodyear found that builders were interested in
using FSC certified products if they could get good quality
Douglas-fir framing lumber, at a reasonable price, from a
supplier in their market. Along came Warm Springs Forest
Products Industries (WSFPI), a tribal enterprise of the
Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Reservation. In 2003,
WSFPI earned FSC certification for over 400,000 acres of
forest on the east side of the Cascades in Oregon. Their
forest produces a number of species, but most notably
Douglas-fir, which is dried at their mill. At that time,
those working to meet demand for quality, kiln-dried,
Douglas-fir lumber in the Pacific Northwest had an
answer.
In 2004, 5% of WSFPI’s lumber produced was sold as
FSC, and in 2005 they are working to increase that number to
25%.
Much of WSFPI’s lumber has been sold to lumberyards,
such as, Tum-A-Lum Lumber in Hood River and Miller Lumber in
Bend. Charley Miller of Miller Lumber said his company has
sold over 1 million board feet of FSC certified lumber since
earning a COC certificate in October of 2004. Charley credits
WSFPI’s location and quality products, plus a growing
demand in eastern Oregon for FSC certified building materials
for such a large amount of sales. However, at Miller Lumber
in Bend, you will get FSC kiln-dried lumber whether you ask
for it or not, because Miller has taken the extra step to
stock and sell only FSC-certified products for its dried
lumber.
Other retail lumberyards who have been stocking FSC
certified lumber or who have recently received COC
certification include Parr Lumber in Newberg and Redmond,
Lumbermens in Clackamas and Cannon Beach, and Keith Brown in
Salem. Still other retail lumberyards have contacted FSC
accredited certifiers about becoming COC too.
Green building programs have also increased the uptake of
other locally produced FSC-certified products as well,
including plywood from Rose-burg Forest Products and Columbia
Forest Products, and hem-fir lumber from The Collins
Companies.
As more residential and commercial green building projects
require FSC-certified products, more lumberyards will make
FSC available, and more land will be certified to the
strongest globally recognized forest management certification
standard. The future looks bright, consumer outreach is
planned to increase awareness of FSC products at several tour
homes in central Oregon this spring which will use
FSC-certified lumber.
The next step will be to encourage other markets around the
country to work towards setting high standards for
residential and commercial building programs that will allow
this type of market transformation to continue in the forest
products industry.
Citation:
"Locally Produced Doug-Fir Framing Lumber Answers the Call
for Green Building Products in OR". FSC News and Views.
April 2005
<http://www.fscus.org/news/index.php?newsletter=74>.
