Putting Tasmanian Timber Workers and Timber Industry First 05 March 2024

Tas Labor

A Labor Government will act immediately to provide security for the thousands of forest industry employees by ensuring open, transparent and secure access to resource by Tasmanian businesses with investments in Tasmania.

Labor will ensure Tasmanian contractors get a fair go at Tasmanian contracts and that the special species sector can get better access to logs.

Quotes attributable to Labor Leader Rebecca White:

Labor has listened to the timber industry and worked very closely with them over the past few years and this policy reflects our dedication to work together to secure a sustainable future for the industry.

Also, importantly, our policy will not create division and reignite the forest wars which will in fact drive away major customers and put Tasmanian timber jobs and businesses at risk.

The timber industry is a vital part of the Tasmanian economy and crucial to regional Tasmania.

A Labor Government that I lead will put Tasmanian timber workers and companies first, not mainland companies.

Quotes attributable to Shadow Resources Minister Shane Broad:

For the last 10 years the Liberals have taken the Tasmanian timber industry for granted by using them as a political football while failing to address their growing concerns about resource security and transparency.

Under the Liberals’ watch contracted volumes have not been delivered, iconic special species logs have dwindled to almost nothing and local logging contractors have been overlooked for cashed up mainland operators.

Labor will ensure that contracts are extended out to 2040 and include plantation sawlogs, special species are managed independently and that a 25 per cent local benefits test applies to logging and haulage contracts.

Labor agrees that an independent pricing mechanism is needed to ensure contract terms are fair and can be independently audited.

The details:

A Rebecca White Labor Government will:

  • STOP the current plantation sawlog Expression of Interest process being conducted by Sustainable Timbers Tasmania (STT), a process which could see mills starved of logs, workers thrown on the scrapheap and more logs exported out of Tasmania.
  • REVIEW the available resources – both native forest and plantation – in an open and transparent process with independent oversight.
  • PROTECT existing Tasmanian businesses and their workers to ensure they have the highest priority to obtain long term secure contracts for wood supply. No sawlog or peelers will be exported in whole log form if they can be processed in Tasmania.
  • DEVELOP a framework for prioritising access to STT’s wood supply capacity that is in the best interests of the State with a particular reference to regional Tasmania.
  • PROVIDE confidence to existing STT customers by giving them the opportunity to negotiate enforceable contracts on commercial terms for their existing volumes, as a minimum until 2040.
  • ENFORCE the local benefits weighting of 25 per cent so that Tasmanian contractors get a fair go.
  • ENSURE the future of the special species sector by the creation of a standalone Special Timbers Authority tasked with managing all aspects of non-blackwood special species timber supply and management.
  • ESTABLISH an independent Forest Products Price Oversight Body to ensure Tasmanians obtain a fair price for their resources.
  • ALLOCATE $5 million towards developing new ways to process logs on-island.
  • PROVIDE $350,000 for a heli-harvesting trial of dead Huon pine.
  • COMMIT to funding the Tasmanian Timber Promotion Board in future Budgets.
  • COMMIT to including private forest estate owners in the TasGRN rollout.
  • REWRITE the STT Ministerial Charter to reflect our Tasmania First Timber Policy

Rebecca White MP

Tasmanian Labor Leader

Shane Broad MP

Shadow Minister for Resources

/Public Release. View in full here.