• Home
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Newsroom
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • Current Issue
    • Latest News
    • Special Report
    • Up Close
    • Opinion
  • News by Sector
    • Real Estate & Construction
    • Banking & Finance
    • Health Care
    • Education & Talent
    • North Idaho
    • Technology
    • Manufacturing
    • Retail
    • Government
  • Roundups & Features
    • Calendar
    • People
    • Business Licenses
    • Q&A Profiles
    • Cranes & Elevators
    • Retrospective
    • Insights
    • Restaurants & Retail
  • Supplements & Magazines
    • Book of Lists
    • Building the INW
    • Market Fact Book
    • Economic Forecast
    • Best Places to Work
    • Partner Publications
  • E-Edition
  • Journal Events
    • Elevating the Conversation
    • Workforce Summit
    • Icons
    • Women in Leadership
    • Rising Stars
    • Best Places to Work
    • People of Influence
    • Business of the Year Awards
  • Podcasts
  • Sponsored
  • INW Senior
Home » Clearing fuels from our forests urgently needed

Clearing fuels from our forests urgently needed

~

July 29, 2021
Don Brunell

Massive forest fires in western parts of our country are not only choking us with layers of thick smoke but are leaving behind millions of acres of scorched hillsides, ridges, and valleys.

According to the Arbor Day Foundation, record wildfire seasons in recent years have destroyed millions of trees. Many forests have burned so severely that natural regeneration isn’t possible, making replanting necessary.

Unfortunately, much of the U.S. Forest Service budget is diverted to fighting massive fires with much less funding left for site preparation and replanting. “This has left the Forest Service with a backlog of more than 1 million acres of forest land in need of replanting. Each year—with every wildfire, storm or insect epidemic—the backlog steadily increases,” the foundation claims.

What is needed is a massive salvage and replanting effort such as that undertaken by Weyerhaeuser following the eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980. That morning, the mountain blasted sideways at 650 mph and devastated almost 150,000 acres of privately owned, state, and national forests.

Weyerhaeuser was the largest private landowner impacted by the eruption. Nearly 68,000 acres, about 14%, of its St. Helens Tree Farm were flattened.

Much of the downed timber was usable but was at great risk of damage from insects and diseases. Over two years, Weyerhaeuser recovered 850 million board feet of timber—enough lumber to build 85,000 three-bedroom homes. Tree removal prepared the land for replanting. By June 1987, Weyerhaeuser hand planted 18.4 million trees on over 45,500 acres. Today, a healthy forest thrives.

The problem with denuded forestlands in need of replanting is increasing. Overall in the U.S., 86 large fires have burned close to 1.5 million acres in 12 states so far this year, the National Interagency Fire Center reported last week. Heavy smoke is again blanketing much of our western states and Canada.

Unfortunately, smoke from wildfires is overlapping the COVID-19 pandemic. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention continues to warn it is a huge health risk.

In 2020, California wildfires alone generated more than 91 million metric tons of CO2, according to Global Fire Emissions Database. That was about 25% more than annual emissions from fossil fuels in the entire state.

A 2015 U.S. Forest Service study of federal forests in the Wenatchee area found that large wildfires can leave behind thousands of acres of fire-killed trees that eventually become fuels for future fires.

The growing number of wildfires across the planet are public health threats. Robbing them of their fuel is critical to controlling massive wildfires.

Salvage logging of burned-over lands makes sense. Milling charred trees creates thousands of jobs and makes new homes more affordable. Replanting seedlings replenishes the forests’ ability to convert CO2 into life-giving oxygen.

The bottom line: Clearing dead trees and debris from the forest floor is urgently needed.

Don C. Brunell is a business analyst, writer, and retired president of the Association of Washington Business. He now lives in Vancouver, Washington, and can be contacted at [email protected].

    Latest News Health Care Government
    • Related Articles

      Guest Commentary: Beetle-damaged forests release record levels of carbon

      Fossil fuels are taken for granted

      Clearing the fog on Initiative 522

    • Related Products

      Book of Lists Hard Copy

      Book of Lists Digital Version - Largest Wealth Management Firms

      Book of Lists Digital Version - Leading Industrial Parks

    Don Brunell

    Bush evokes memories of a kinder America

    More from this author
    Daily News Updates

    Subscribe today to our free E-Newsletters!

    Subscribe

    Featured Poll

    How much are you spending on holiday shopping this year?

    Popular Articles

    • By Tina Sulzle

      Trader Joe's puts forward plans in Spokane Valley

    • Vintage (10) c
      By Tina Sulzle

      Aloha Vintage marketplace opens in Millwood

    • 1319f8394524761fe62efd46371b1cb6
      By Dylan Harris

      Silverwood to be acquired by Atlanta company

    • Topgolf web
      By Ethan Pack

      Topgolf project moves forward in Liberty Lake

    • Manufacturing fc collage web
      By Ethan Pack

      Manufacturers invest in INW

    • News Content
      • News
      • Special Report
      • Up Close
      • Roundups & Features
      • Opinion
    • More Content
      • E-Edition
      • E-Mail Newsletters
      • Newsroom
      • Special Publications
      • Partner Publications
    • Customer Service
      • Editorial Calendar
      • Our Readers
      • Advertising
      • Subscriptions
      • Media Kit
    • Other Links
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Journal Events
      • Privacy Policy
      • Tri-Cities Publications

    Journal of Business BBB Business Review allianceLogo.jpg CVC_Logo-1_small.jpg

    All content copyright ©  2025 by the Journal of Business and Northwest Business Press Inc. All rights reserved.

    Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing