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Distributed June
29, 2006
NR # 20060629-1
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
George Couch
(608) 231-9295
E-mail: gcouch@fs.fed.us
Website: www.fpl.fs.fed.us
GAO Evaluates Federal Support for Wood Utilization Research,
Cites Reduced Funding Despite
Increased International Competition
MADISON, Wis.—Noting that more wood is consumed every
year in the United States than all metals, plastics and masonry cement combined,
the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has issued a report on federal
research and product development activities related to the utilization of
wood.
The report, titled “Wood Utilization – Federal Research and Product
Development Activities, Support, and Technology Transfer” (GAO-06-624)
and dated June 22, 2006, also notes that the United States is the world’s
leading producer of lumber and wood products used in residential construction
and in commercial wood products. The wood product sector employed 535,000
people in 2004. The nation is also a leader in the pulp and paper business,
employing 440,000 workers.
However, the GAO cites other reports that the U.S. forest products industry
faces increasing competition from its traditional competitors ( Canada, the
Scandinavian countries, and Japan) as well as from emerging competitors (
Brazil, Chile, and Indonesia). Approximately 120,000 jobs were lost in the
paper-manufacturing sector from 1999 to 2004. And during the last decade,
the wood household furniture industry lost approximately one-third of its
market share to imports.
“Federal research and product development in wood utilization helps
provide the science and technology needed to conserve the nation’s forest
resources, supply the demand for wood products, and support forest management
and restoration activities,” the 125-page report says.
Although many agencies have provided support for wood utilization research
and product development, the Forest Service has the most experience in this
area—it has been conducting wood utilization research and product development
since 1910 and is a key player in carrying out these research and development
activities, the report says.
The report points out that only the Forest Service employs full-time scientists
and support staff to conduct wood-utilization research and product development
and that most of the Forest Service’s utilization research and product
development is conducted at its Forest Products Laboratory (FPL) in Madison,
Wis.
However, the report says, a 2002 National Academy of Sciences report showed
a nearly 30-percent decline in the Forest Service’s budget authority
for products research since 1980 (in inflation-adjusted dollars), and a loss
of about 46 percent in Forest Service research scientists from 1985 to 1999.
According to Chris Risbrudt, Ph.D., director of FPL, this affects many areas
of our society and economy. “The researchers and support staff at FPL
have an increasingly important but difficult job. Not only do we need to help
U.S. industry compete internationally, but our work can directly affect the
nation’s ability to preserve its forests, build affordable energy-efficient
homes, find sustainable alternatives to fossil fuels, and maintain vigorous
rural forest-based economies,” he said.
“As funding for utilization research declines, achieving that mission
becomes more complicated and challenging, especially as we strive to make
use of new scientific tools such as nanotechnology,” he said.
“The GAO report highlights the dilemma we face. Senators Lugar and
Cochran have performed a real service by asking the GAO to look at this issue,” he
said.
The GAO report was requested by Senators Dick Lugar, R-Ind., and Thad Cochran,
R-Miss., in July 2004 to evaluate the federal government’s capability
to develop emerging technologies to help boost the competitiveness of the
U.S. wood-products industry.
According to the report, a dozen federal agencies support wood-utilization
research and product development, but only two agencies—the Forest Service
and The Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service (CSREES)—specifically
target those activities. Both agencies are part of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. CSREES supports such activities through a grant directed by Congressional
committee to wood utilization research centers at some 12 universities.
The report is available on the GAO Web site at: http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d06624.pdf.
The US Forest Service Forest Products Laboratory was established in 1910
in Madison, Wis., with the mission to conserve and extend the country’s
wood resources. Today, FPL’s research scientists work with academic
and industrial researchers and other government agencies in exploring ways
to promote healthy forests and clean water, and improve papermaking and recycling
processes. Information is available at FPL’s Web site: www.fpl.fs.fed.us.
Through FPL’s Advanced Housing Research Center, researchers also work
to improve homebuilding technologies and materials.
# # #
For photos or additional information, contact:
George N. Couch
Public Affairs Specialist
Forest Products Laboratory
gcouch@fs.fed.us
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