Some very important explanatory background info has just been presented by Warwick Raverty – principal scientific adviser on the Resource Planning Development Commission (RPDC) Assessment Panel for the Gunns proposal – in an article for New Matilda. The science is difficult…maybe this is why the details haven’t ‘come out’ in the media… a bit hard for non-scientists to digest?
The cleanest, greenest kraft mills exist in environmentally conscious nations: Sweden, Germany, Finland. The best mill — in Stendal, Germany — was built between 2002-5 by a private company, Mercer International, using a € 250 million government subsidy that enabled it to be built in an area of high unemployment, plentiful plantation forests and low population density. Mercer’s mill is exactly one half the size of the one proposed by Gunns.
Many inconvenient truths indicate that this German paradigm is highly appropriate as we enter the 21st century.
Misguided economic rationalism has forced many industries into direct conflict with environment and communities and the pulp industry is no exception. We all use lots of paper — it’s just as essential to developed societies as electricity, public transport, ports and health services; all of which are subsidised for the public good with taxpayers’ money.
Likewise, kraft mills are legitimate infrastructure. They rely on public assets like sustainably managed native forests, groundwater for plantation forests, public fresh water for processing, oceans to accept highly treated, non-toxic wastewaters and the atmosphere to disperse and biodegrade unavoidable fugitive odours.
The cost differences between a pulp mill at the ideal location of Hampshire and the totally unsuitable site in the Tamar Valley should therefore become the first beneficiary of John Howard’s Infrastructure Fund (and Kevin Rudd’s equivalent). Subsidy of the additional wood transport costs identified by Gunns would create more jobs for Tasmanian forestry workers, who justifiably fear unemployment and a diminished future.
Federal subsidies would only be needed for 15 of the mill’s 100-year lifetime. Local plantations could then meet the mill’s total requirement.
Federal intervention with well-directed subsidies would demonstrate ‘aspirational nationalism’ and visionary leadership at their best.
The involvement of influential, fair-minded people like Geoff Cousins, Leo Schofield, Rebecca Gibney, David Williamson and the other 120 Australians of note who have signed an advertisement asking Minister Turnbull to insist on the most stringent assessment available, is very welcome. It shows that grass-roots democracy is alive and well in Australia and that people on the mainland will actively support people in Tasmania who have been fighting the ugly aspects of this issue since November 2004.
It is now time for our politicians at both Federal and State levels to respond to this call. Prime Minister Howard’s pronouncement that ‘Australians are interested in good outcomes, not theories of government’ is even more applicable to a pulp mill that will last 100 years or more than it is to a small regional hospital. A project of national significance like a giant chemical pulp mill needs rigorous assessment and sensitive siting. If government subsidy is required to achieve that, so be it.
Australia should model itself more on the forward-thinking nations of Europe and less on the ‘head-in-the sand’ attitudes of the Tasmanian Labor Government.
Between January 2005 and December 2006, Warwick Raverty served on the RPDC Assessment Panel for the Gunns proposal as principal scientific adviser. He has 27 years experience as a scientist in the pulp and paper industry. The opinions expressed in his article are his own personal views and do not reflect the views of his present employer, CSIRO.
4 Comments
I am relieved in a way to hear from Warwick Raverty that my suspicions were correct regarding this infamous project (because I’m led by emotion, not science). I am concerned however that Mr Turnbull may not be listening, and he seems to have the sole responsibility now. That’s pretty serious, to give just one person the final decision on something to last 100 years.
Agreed, Roma.
Anyone who knows the history of the forest-destruction industry in Tasmania will know the PLANTATIONS ARE NOT (repeat NOT) GREEN.
Vast expanse of tree monocultures, subject to repeated aerial spraying each year, place where native forest once grew, managed by absentee landlord transnational corporations. Not surprisingly the land becomes weed infested. Fire breaks between dwellings don’t meet even the inadequate 50 metres specified in the fire guidelines and they’re not maintained. On the carbon-emission side of the equation the industry has raked up and burnt hundreds and hundreds of years of stored carbon in old-growth and regrowth forests. (Remember most of the regrowth forest has never been clearfelled before let alone the soils dug up and baked by napalm with their enormous industrial burnoffs.) When plantations are harvested most of the biomass is often piled up and burnt yet again. Check the Australian Greenhouse Office dubious stats relating to forestry. They have not even calculated the CO2 emissions through these huge industrial burnoffs every Autumn now for the last 10 years.
This is an industry that fits the neoliberal export paradigm perfectly. Damn the consequences to people and the environment. Push economic growth through the dirtiest shortcuts imanginable. Economics driven only for the profit of a small minority of people.
Find out about Australian taxpayer funded handover of our best agricultural land to corporations under the Managed Investment Schemes (MIS).
Then, there’s global overcapacity of paper pulp. Pulp mills are being financed without due financial diligence.
“Without significant reduction in existing capacity to offset that coming on stream, we see little cause for optimism when it
comes to higher pulp prices. While still the world’s largest pulp producers, North American producers have steadily lost share to Latin American producers. Latin America has the advantage of shorter growing cycles for hardwood pulp lower labor costs, and, for now, a weak currency. . .”
Global Supply/Demand Outlook Through 2008
D:\2006_10_23BrendaBackups\EconomicHistory\2004\GlobalSupplyDemandOutlook_dec04.pdf
http://www.fullermoney.com/content/2005-01-12/RameshMorganSmetalsms2004dec14global.pdf –
Regarding the Stendal Mill in East Germany:
“..The [European Investment Bank] EIB provided the lead financing for the Stendal pulp mill in former Eastern Germany. The financing was made despite industry overcapacity, and its key justification was that the project by created 580 direct, and 1,000 jobs. It should be noted that at an investment cost of E245m (and a total project cost of E 1 bn) the cost of creating these jobs was high, and there must have been political considerations – such as promoting the integration of Eastern Germany into the EU – that also played a role.”
Source: Financing Pulp Mills – An Appraisal of Risk Assessment and Safeguard Procedures. Machteld Spek. Bogor, Indonesia: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), 2006. 86p. ISBN 979-24-4612-5
http://www.cifor.cgiar.org/publications/pdf_files/Books/BSpek0601.pdf
Mr Raverty has been asked repeatedly to address these (above) issues and there is no record of him having done so.
This is a long-long story. But there are very useful story archives at http://www.tasmaniantimes.com
Thanks for this info in the long, long debate about our environment Brenda.