September 22, 2017 CapitalPress.com 9 Oregon Upper Deschutes Basin Area in detail HOOD RIVER New wood products may impact forest management, wildfi res By ERIC MORTENSON MORROW Online Capital Press Oregon BEST CLT report: http://bit.ly/2fhpFTd CLACKAMAS MARION JEFFERSON LINN WHEELER Prineville LANE La Pine LAKE KLAMATH N HARNEY 30 miles Alan Kenaga/Capital Press Outreach planned for Upper Deschutes Basin study By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Federal authorities will soon be sharing preliminary fi ndings of a water study of Oregon’s Upper Deschutes Basin with landowners and other affected parties. The U.S. Bureau of Recla- mation and regional partners will use the input to complete their analysis of water man- agement in the basin, whose water supply demands are eventually expected to exceed supplies by 230,000 acre-feet a year. One component of the report, which is due in mid- 2018, will examine the fea- sibility of expanding water storage in the region. The possibilities being studied include raising an ex- isting dam to expand the Hay- stack Reservoir south of Ma- dras, Ore., or building a new upstream facility. The study is also look- ing at creating a new “Mon- ner” reservoir east of Madras or restoring storage in the Prineville reservoir that’s been lost to sedimentation. Water conservation and water transfers are also being examined in the study, said Mike Relf, project manager with the Bureau of Reclama- tion’s Pacifi c Northwest re- gional offi ce. “Storage is just one part of the basin study,” Relf said. The goal is to lay out the benefi ts and challenges of po- tential storage options, rather than make any recommenda- tions, he said. “The idea is not to promote any particular idea,” Relf said. Building or expanding wa- ter reservoirs would entail en- vironmental studies and fund- ing processes that would likely require decades to complete, he said. “Storage would by far be the longest-term idea out there.” It’s worthwhile to take a closer look at storage possi- bility, the likelihood of actu- ally starting construction is a long shot, said Mike Britton, general manager of the North Unit Irrigation District, which is one of the partners partic- ipating in the $1.5 million study. Aside from bureaucratic and fi nancial hurdles, storage projects are often unrealistic because they’d fl ood exist- ing infrastructure, such as gas pipelines and power transmis- sion lines, he said. “Those types of obstacles are potential deal stoppers,” Britton said. California, for example, has a long list of potential storage options that haven’t been built for decades, he said. “I doubt we’d be that much different here, unfortunately.” The prospect of expanding the Haystack Reservoir, how- ever, is making at least one landowner nervous. Kenny Reed, who owns a ranch abutting the reservoir, worries an expansion would disrupt habitat for bald eagles that he’s conserving under an agreement with the federal government. Reed has expressed his concerns to the Bureau of Reclamation, which has ac- knowledged there’s a conser- vation plan for the area. Could a revival of Ore- gon’s timber industry reduce the fuel load in public forests and ease the blistering wild- fi res that choked much of the state in smoke the past few weeks? At this point it’s an in- triguing question without a simple answer. But it arises as university researchers and industry offi cials explore ad- vanced wood products such as cross-laminated timbers — called CLT — and mass plywood panels, which can support multi-story wood- en buildings, even modest high-rises. Only two Western Oregon mills and a handful of others nationally make the products, but they appear to hold promise. For one thing, the mas- sive beams and panels can be made with small-diameter logs, the very type crowding forests and contributing to the explosive growth of the Eagle Creek Fire in the Co- lumbia River Gorge Nation- al Scenic Area and the much larger Chetco Bar Fire in the Kalmiopsis Wilderness in the southwest corner of the state. A recent report by Ore- gon BEST, a quasi-public entity that funds clean tech- nology startups and links entrepreneurs to university researchers, said CLT and related mass timber manu- facturing could create 2,000 to 6,100 direct jobs in Ore- gon. Income generated from those jobs would range from $124 million to $371 mil- lion a year, according to the report. The estimate came from an analysis by Busi- ness Oregon, the state de- partment. Oregon BEST said Ore- gon and Southwest Wash- ington are “poised as a manufacturing hub for the emerging Cross Laminated Associated Press File A piece of cross-laminated timber, or CLT, which is made from smaller trees harvested in Oregon forests. Some experts believe new technology may open the door for a revitalized timber industry and change the way forests are managed in the region. Timber market in the United States.” Pacific Northwest forests could easily and sus- tainably supply the wood needed for production, the report said. People working in the field issue a cautionary, “Yes, but. …” “In theory, it makes a lot of sense, but it requires for the forests to be actively managed in that way, and an outlet for that wood to be taken up,” said Timm Locke, director of forest products for the Oregon Forest Research Institute, an organization founded by the Oregon Leg- islature to enhance collab- oration and inform the pub- lic about responsible forest management. Locke said the public for- ests most in need of resto- ration and thinning work are east of the Cascades, where much of the milling infra- structure has “disappeared.” It doesn’t make economic sense to move poor quality trees from Eastern Oregon to mills in Western Oregon, he said. “We need to be thinking about what’s stopping us at this stage,” Locke said. “What are the issues there?” One of them, he said, is a lack of trust between industry and the public land agencies — principally the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. Mills that once depended on logs from pub- lic forests were “burned” when the timber harvest was drastically reduced due to lawsuits and policy and reg- ulatory changes over threat- ened species, wildlife habitat and watersheds. An often-cit- ed statistic shows the Forest Service manages 60 percent of the timberland in Oregon but that land produces only 15 percent of the annual har- vest. “It’s diffi cult for govern- ment agencies to make sig- nifi cant changes quickly,” Locke said. “There’s a lot of process that has to happen.” Locke believes the For- est Service is on the right track, but noted that conser- vation groups often oppose increased logging on public land. “It’s a tricky subject, no question about it,” he said. “Public discussion about public land management — I think we’re ripe for that con- versation.” A Forest Service offi cial said the agency makes 600 million board-feet of timber available for sale annually in Oregon and Washington, and the perspective that it is hold- ing up an industry revival is “dated.” Debbie Hollen, director of state and private forestry for the Forest Service in Port- land, said the agency hopes tall wood buildings provide the market for restoration log- ging and thinning. The agency’s Wood Inno- vation Grant Program pro- vides funding to help create a market for fuel that needs to be removed from the forests. “Our hope is that it will be the value-add that makes it worthwhile,” Hollen said. “Industry is not there yet.” The research infrastructure is swinging into place. Oregon State University’s colleges of forestry and engineering have teamed with the University of Oregon’s School of Archi- tecture to form the TallWood Design Institute at OSU. It is the nation’s fi rst research center to focus exclusively on advanced structural wood products. At this point, the one con- stant is fi re. John Bailey, a professor of silviculture and fi re manage- ment at OSU, said the amount of biomass accumulated on forested hillsides is greater than ever before. Whether people see the biomass as scenery, recreation site, wild- life habitat or timber, it’s go- ing to “exit the system” one way or the other, he said. Humans remove less of the biomass through log- ging and thinning than in the past, which contributes to the fi erce, explosive, “climate driven fi re” that has gotten our attention. With more forested acreage closely connected, and with hot, dry, windy con- ditions prevailing, fi res quick- ly grow large, he said. Bailey said the Forest Ser- vice is doing all the manage- ment that society allows it to do, and it’s time to “rethink what we do with the hillsides in light of fuel accumulation” and climate conditions. John Deere Dealers See one of these dealers for a demonstration 38-1/102