


We distribute your press release locally, nationally and internationally with a worldwide network of online and print news outlets. Unlike other major press release distribution services, we have no membership fees, and no added charge for targeting your press release.

|
|
As a result of the implemented and planned log export taxes
in Russia, shipments of softwood logs from Russia have
declined both to Europe and Asia in 2007 and 2008. In the
first quarter of 2008, Russia shipped 44% less to Europe and
15% less to Asia.
Seattle, USA, August 21, 2008 -- Wood Resource Quarterly
reports that softwood sawlog prices increased in Russia
during the 2Q, in contrast to the sharp decline noted during
the 1Q. Contrary to earlier price movements, this time it was
the domestic market rather than the export market that was
the main price driver as the housing market in western Russia
strengthened substantially.
As a result of the implemented and planned log export taxes
in Russia, shipments of softwood logs from Russia have
declined both to Europe and Asia in 2007 and 2008. In the
first quarter of 2008, Russia shipped 44% less to Europe and
15% less to Asia. During the 1Q/08, Russia exported less to
all of its major trading partners except China, which
increased purchases by 14%. Softwood log exports are, so
far in 2008, at the lowest level in four years. The major
consumers of exported pine and spruce logs from Northwest
Russia are sawmills and to a lesser extent Sweden. In 2007,
Sweden and Finland alone imported 89% of Russia’s total
shipments to Europe. Other importers included sawmills in
Estonia and Latvia, which increasingly have become
dependent on Russia for sawlogs.
The declining exports of softwood logs have benefited the
domestic industry in Russia for two main reasons: increased
availability and lower costs for sawlogs. This was particularly
true in the 1Q this year, when raw material costs declined
substantially in both Northwest Russia and Siberia. In the 2Q,
sawlog prices rebounded slightly as demand from domestic
sawmills increased.
One key reason for the changing market conditions has been
the ample supply of logs thanks to favorable logging and
hauling conditions during the winter months. In the past, it
was quite common that wood prices would fall early in the
year due to good weather conditions, but then increase in the
spring when bad road conditions limited the timber volumes
that could be hauled out from the forests. Another reason for
the reduction in prices has been the unusually high domestic
sawlog supply as the result of declining log exports to Europe.
In the 1Q/08, European countries imported 43% less
softwood roundwood from Russia than in the same quarter in
2007, while hardwood log exports were up by over 50%.
Despite the recent fall in prices, log costs in Russia have still
not come down to the same level as a couple of years ago,
according to WRQ. With the recent reduction in log costs,
Russian sawmills currently have some of the lowest wood
costs in the world. With the possibility of a plentiful supply of
logs next year secondary to the log tax increase, log costs
within Russia are likely to stay down during 2009.
Global pulpwood and sawlog market updates are included in
the 50-page publication Wood Resource Quarterly. The
report, established in 1988 and with readers in over 20
countries, tracks wood prices in most regions around the
world and also includes regular updates of international pulp,
lumber and biomass markets.
Contact Information
Wood Resources International
Hakan Ekstrom
info@wri-ltd.com
www.woodprices.com
Press Release Submission By PressReleasePoint
(http://www.pressreleasepoint.com)
Press Contact:
Hakan Ekstrom
Wood Resources International
P.O. Box 1891
Bothell,WA 98041 USA
425 402 8809
info@wri-ltd.com
http://www.woodprices.com
|
|
|
|
|