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Oregonians express mixed feelings about benefits of logging, survey says

State, federal and private forests in Oregon are managed for both timber and for conservation.
Bureau of Land Management
/
Flickr
State, federal and private forests in Oregon are managed for both timber and for conservation.

More than 40% of Oregon adults say the state鈥檚 forests are overlogged, but most also believe that harvesting timber is part of maintaining healthy forests, according to a .

In November, the nonprofit, nonpartisan group Oregon Values and Beliefs Center sent an online survey to residents statewide to learn about their attitudes toward logging and the health of state forests.

More than 1,550 people responded.

They were asked about their 鈥済ut feelings鈥 toward logging in Oregon, and whether it鈥檚 occurring too much or not enough. About 43% said they felt logging is occurring way too often or somewhat too often, while more than one-third said that the right amount of logging is occurring in the state. About 20% felt logging was not happening quite enough or definitely not enough.

Nearly half the state is covered in forests, and Oregon is the largest source of lumber in the country, according to the Oregon Forest Resources Institute, a group created by the Legislature in the early 1990s to support the growth of the state鈥檚 forest products industry.

The federal government owns most of Oregon鈥檚 forestland, but very little logging occurs on them. More than 75% of logging in Oregon occurs on about one-third of the state鈥檚 forestlands, owned and managed by the state or private landowners.

Despite many feeling too much logging is taking place, more than three-quarters of all respondents said that forest management practices, including commercial timber harvests, are important to maintain forest health. This management also includes thinning, prescribed burns, replanting trees and protecting old-growth trees from being logged.

More than half of the respondents support collecting wood debris left in forests from logging and converting it into biofuels, such as biodiesel for cars and trucks, or for electricity. But about 30% said they did not know enough about biofuels and the use of woody biomass for energy to have an opinion.

Proponents of such practices say using castaway wood from logging for biofuels is a way to take a renewable resource and create less carbon-intensive fuel than coal, oil and gas. But conservationists argue it incentivizes the destruction of forests for wood that can be used for fuels, and that it鈥檚 inefficient given how much it costs to collect and transport wood to facilities that can process it into biofuels.

There are currently 15 power plants in Oregon that use woody biomass to generate electricity, according to the watchdog group Citizens鈥 Utility Board.

Most survey respondents said they support using public and taxpayer dollars to reduce some logging in order to keep more trees and old-growth trees in the ground to suck up carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and help combat climate change. Respondents said they were less supportive of doing so for large, industrial land and forest owners.

More than three-quarters of respondents want the state to provide funding for urban and rural tree planting programs and about half of respondents believe at least half of all of Oregon鈥檚 forests should be set aside as wilderness areas where commercial timber production cannot take place.

The  is a professional, nonprofit news organization. We are an affiliate of , a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit supported by grants and a coalition of donors and readers. The Capital Chronicle retains full editorial independence, meaning decisions about news and coverage are made by Oregonians for Oregonians.

Alex Baumhardt is a JPR content partner from the Oregon Capital Chronicle. Before that Alex was a national radio producer focusing on education for American Public Media.