Wood economy
The existence of a wood economy, or more broadly, a forest economy, is a prominent matter in many developing countries as well as in many other nations with a temperate climate and especially in those with low temperatures. These are generally the countries with greater forested areas. The uses of wood in furniture, buildings, bridges, and as a source of energy are widely known. Additionally, wood from trees and bushes, can be turned into a variety of production, such as wood pulp, cellulose in paper, celluloid in early photographic film, cellophane, and rayon.
At the end of their normal usage, wood products can be burnt to obtain thermal energy or can be used as a fertilizer. The potential environmental damage that a wood economy could occasion include a reduction of biodiversity due to monoculture forestry ; and CO2 emissions. However, forests can aid in the reduction of atmospheric carbon dioxide and therefore decrease global warming.
, containing an entire year's worth of logs from one timber camp.
Paper is today the most used wood product.
Introduction
History of use of wood
The wood economy is historically the starting point of the civilizations worldwide, since eras preceding the Paleolithic and the Neolithic. It necessarily preceded ages of metals by many millennia, as the melting of metals was possible only through the discovery of techniques to light fire and the building of many simple machines and rudimentary tools, as canes, club handles, bows, arrows, lances. One of the most ancient handmade articles ever found is a polished wooden spear tip 250,000 years old, that was buried under sediments in England, at Clacton-on-Sea.Successive civilizations such as the Egyptians and Sumerians built sophisticated objects of furniture. Many types of furniture in ivory and valuable woods have survived to our time practically intact, because secluded in inviolated secret tombs, they were protected from decay also by the dry environment of desert. Many buildings and parts of these contained elements in wood forming structural supports and covering; means of transport such as boats, ships; and later wagons and carriages, winches, flour mills powered by water, etc.
Dimensions and geography
The main source of the lumber used in the world is forests, which can be classified as virgin, semivirgin and plantations. Much timber is removed for firewood by local populations in many countries, especially in the third world, but this amount can only be estimated, with wide margins of uncertainty.In 1998, the worldwide production of "Roundwood", was about, amounting to around 45% of the wood cultivated in the world. Cut logs and branches destined to become elements for building construction accounted for approximately 55% of the world's industrial wood production. 25% became wood pulp mainly destined for the production of paper and paperboard, and approximately 20% became panels in plywood and valuable wood for furniture and objects of common use. The World's largest producer and consumer of officially accounted wood are the United States, although the country that possesses the greatest area of forest in Russia.
In the 1970s, the countries with the largest forest area were: Soviet Union, Brazil, Canada, United States, Indonesia and Democratic Republic of Congo. Other countries with important production and consumption of wood usually have a low density of population in relation to their territorial extension, here we can include countries as Argentina, Chile, Finland, Poland, Sweden, Ukraine.
By 2001 the rainforest areas of Brazil were reduced by a fifth, to around 4,000,000 km²; the ground cleared was mainly destined for cattle pasture—Brazil is the world's largest exporter of beef with almost 200,000,000 head of cattle. The booming Brazilian ethanol economy based upon sugar cane cultivation, is likewise reducing forests area. Canadian forest was reduced by almost 30% to 3,101,340 km² over the same period.
Importance in fighting greenhouse effect
Regarding the problem of climate change, it is known that burning forests increase CO2 in the atmosphere, while intact virgin forest or plantations act as sinks for CO2, for these reasons wood economy fights greenhouse effect. The amount of CO2 absorbed depends on the type of trees, lands and the climate of the place where trees naturally grow or are planted. Moreover, by night plants do not photosynthesize, and produce CO2, eliminated the successive day. Paradoxically in summer oxygen created by photosynthesis in forests near to cities and urban parks, interacts with urban air pollution and is transformed by solar beams in ozone, that while in high atmosphere constitutes a filter against ultraviolet beams, in the low atmosphere is a pollutant, able to provoke respiratory disturbances.In a low-carbon economy, forestry operations will be focused on low-impact practices and regrowth. Forest managers will make sure that they do not disturb soil-based carbon reserves too much. Specialized tree farms will be the main source of material for many products. Quick maturing tree varieties will be grown on short rotations in order to maximize output.
Per nation/continental area
In Australia
- Eucalyptus: these are seven hundred tree species from Australia, that grow very fast in tropical, sub-tropical and semi-arid climates, and are very resistant to forest fires and drought. Its essential oil is used in pharmacology, its wood for building, and the small branches as firewood and pulpwood.
In Brazil
- Brazilwood: has a dense, orange-red heartwood that takes a high red shine, and it is the premier wood used for making bows for string instruments from the violin family. These trees soon became the biggest source of red dye, and they were such a large part of the economy and export of that country, that slowly it was known as Brazil.
- Hevea brasiliensis: is the biggest source of the best latex, that is used to manufacture many objects in rubber, as an example gloves, condoms, anti-allergic mattresses and tires. Latex has the ability to adjust to the exact shape of the body part, an advantage over polyurethane or polyethylene gloves.
In Canada and the US
Canada
The agency Canada Wood Council calculates that in the year 2005 in Canada, the forest sector employed 930,000 workers, making around $108 billion of value in goods and services. For many years products derived from trees in Canadian forests had been the most important export items of the country. In 2011, exports around the world totaled some $64.3 billion – the single largest contributor to Canadian trade balance.Canada is the world leader in sustainable forest management practices. Only are currently managed for timber production while an estimated are protected from harvesting by the current legislation.
US
- Cherry: a hardwood prized for its high quality in grain, width, color, and rich warm glow. The first trees were carried to the lands surrounding Rome from Armenia. In the United States, most cherry trees are grown in Washington, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, California and Oregon.
- Cedar: this genus is a group of conifers of the family Pinaceae, originating from high mountain areas from the Carpathians, Lebanon and Turkey to the Himalayas. Their scented wood make them suitable for chests and closet lining. Cedar oil and wood is known to be a natural repellent to moths. Actually are planted in western and southern US, mostly for ornamental purposes, but also for the production of pencils.
- Douglas fir: a native tree of the United States west coast and mountain states, with records in fast growth and high statures in brief time. The coast Douglas fir grows in coastal regions up to altitudes of about 1,800 meters; the Rocky Mountain Douglas fir grows farther inland, at altitudes ranging from 800 m to 3,000 m or higher. The wood is used for construction, for homebuilt aircraft, for paper pulp, and also as firewood.
- Hybrid poplar is being investigated by Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee for genetic engineering in order to obtain a tree with a higher content of cellulose and a lower content in lignin, in such a way that the extraction of bioethanol could be easier and less expensive.
- Walnut: a prized furniture and carving hardwood because of its colour, hardness, grain and durability. Walnut wood has been the timber of choice for gun makers for centuries. It remains one of the most popular choices for rifle and shotgun stocks.
In the Caribbean and Central America
- Mahogany: has a straight grain, usually free of voids and pockets. The most prized species come from Cuba and Honduras. It has a reddish-brown color, which darkens over time, and displays a beautiful reddish sheen when polished. It has excellent workability, is available in big boards, and is very durable. Mahogany is used in the making of many musical instruments, as drums, acoustic and electric guitars' back and side, and luxury headphones.
In Europe
Italy
The species that are ideal for the many uses in this type of economy are those employed by arboriculture, that are very well known for their features and the need for certain types of ground and climates.- Fraxinus: being a lightweight wood is easy to transport, as firewood burns easily, grows in damp environments like those present in river flooding areas, stands pollution of water and air.
- Larix: in Italy it grows at high altitudes around mountain tops, its timber stand sudden climatic change, from icy winds to high temperatures in sunny afternoon summers, it is excellent for use in the building of exposed structures as bridges, roofs, etc.
- Stone pine: "Mediterranean pine" could be the noble emblem of many coastal areas in Italy, originally giant forests of pines extended from the mouth of the Tiber river until Liguria and Provence in France, over soils with high salinity, not very apt for agriculture. Its trees produce a vast amount of dry branches that can be burnt, cones and needle-like foliage that can be burnt, or used as mulch. Oils and resins can be used in scents and ointments. The pinoli are useful elements in Italian cooking. Currently, "progress" has brought to a severe reduction of this magnificent tree extensions, and in many places cheap beach buildings, car-parking and semi-abandoned areas have taken their place.
- Poplar: in Italy is the most important species for tree plantations, is used for several purposes as plywood manufacture, packing boxes, paper, matches, etc. It needs good quality grounds with good drainage, but can be used to protect the cultivations if disposed in windbreak lines. More than 70% of Italian poplar cultivations are located in the pianura Padana. Constantly the extension of the cultivation is being reduced, from 650 km² in the 1980s to current 350 km². The yield of poplars is about 1,500 t/km² of wood every year. The production from poplars is around 45–50% of the total Italian wood production.
- * In the history of art poplar was the wood of choice for painting surfaces as panels, as in Renaissance. Because of this reason, many of the products with the highest added value, extremely expensive, are made with wood from the humble but durable poplar.
- * Because of the presence of tannic acid, poplar cortex was often used in Europe for the tanning of leather.
Portugal
- Oak for cork: are trees with a slow growth, but long life, are cultivated in warm hill areas in all the west area of Mediterranean shores. Cork is popular as a material for bulletin boards. Even if the production as stoppers for wine bottles is diminishing in favor of nylon stoppers, in the sake of energy saving granules of cork can be mixed into concrete. These composites have low thermal conductivity, low density and good energy absorption. Some of the property ranges of the composites are density, compressive strength and flexural strength. Because of this cork can be used as thermal isolation in buildings, useful also as sound insulation. In the shoe industry cork is used for soles and insoles. In the world there are 20,000 km² of cork oak plantations, and every year are extracted around 300,000 tons of cork, 50% in Portugal, 15,000 in Italy. The advantage of this natural industry is that the extraction of cork from layers outer to the cortex does not kill the tree.
In Scandinavia and Russia
- Scots pine and Norway spruce: These species comprise most of boreal forest, and together as a softwood mixture they are converted chemical pulp for paper.
- Birch: is a genus with many species of trees from Scandinavia and Russia, excellent for acid grounds. They act as pioneer species in the frozen border between taiga and tundra, are very resistant to periods of drought and icy conditions. The species Betula nana has been identified as the ideal tree for the acid grounds of the sides of sloped mountains, also in southern Europe, with soils poor in nutrients, where these trees can be used to restrain landslides. Dissolving pulp is produced from birch. Xylitol can be produced by hydrogenation of xylose, which is a byproduct of chemical pulping of birch.
Uses of wood
Combustion
The burning of wood is currently the largest use of energy derived from a solid fuel biomass. Wood fuel may be available as firewood, charcoal, chips, sheets, pellets and sawdust. Wood fuel can be used for cooking and heating through stoves and fireplaces, and occasionally for fueling steam engines and steam turbines that generate electricity. For many centuries many types of traditional ovens were used in order to benefit from the heat generated by wood combustion. Now, more efficient and clean solutions have been developed: advanced fireplaces, wood-fired ovens, wood-burning stoves and pellet stoves, that are able to filter and separate pollutants, thus eliminating many emissions, also allowing to recover a higher quantity of heat that escaped with the chimney fumes.Mean energy density of Wood, was calculated at around 6–17 Megajoule/Kilogram, depending on species and moisture content.
Combustion of wood is, however, linked to the production of micro-environmental pollutants, as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide , as well as nanoparticles.
In Italy poplar has been proposed as a tree cultivated to be transformed into biofuels, because of the excellent ratio of energy extracted from its wood because of poplar's fast growing and capture of atmospheric carbon dioxide to the small amount of energy needed to cultivate, cut and transport the trees. Populus x canadensis 'I-214', grows so fast that is able to reach in diameter and heights of in ten years.
Charcoal
Charcoal is the dark grey residue consisting of impure carbon obtained by removing water and other volatile constituents from animal and vegetation substances. Charcoal is usually produced by slow pyrolysis, the heating of wood or other substances in the absence of oxygen. Charcoal can then be used as a fuel with a higher combustion temperature.Wood gasogen
: is a bulky and heavy device that transforms burning wood in a mix of molecular hydrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, molecular nitrogen and water vapor. This gas mixture, known as "wood gas", "poor gas" or "syngas" is obtained after the combustion of dry wood in a reductive environment with a limited amount of atmospheric air, at temperatures of 900° Celsius, and can fuel an internal combustion engine., with a wood gas generator device.
In the time between World War I and World War II included, because of the lack of oil, in many countries, like Italy, France, Great Britain and Sweden, several gasoline-powered cars were modified, with the addition of a wood gas generator, a device powered by wood, coal, or burnable waste, able to produce gas that immediately, in the same vehicle, could power a slightly modified ICE engine of a standard car. There were several setbacks, as the great reduction of maximum speed and the need to drive using low gears and wisely dosing the amount of air. In modern cars, modified with a wood gas generator, gas emissions are lower to those of the same vehicle running with gasoline.
Methanol
behaves as a liquid at 25 °C, is toxic and corrosive, and in organic chemistry basic books is often called "the spirit of wood", since it can be obtained from wood fermentation. Rarely, when unwise wine-makers mix small chunks of wood and leaves with grapes, methanol can be found as a pollutant of the blend of water, ethanol and other substances derived from grape's fermentation.The best way to obtain methanol from wood is through syngas produced by the anhydrous pyrolysis of wood, a method discovered by ancient Egyptians.
Methanol can be used as an oxygen-rich additive for gasoline. However, it is usually much cheaper to produce methanol from methane or from syngas. Methanol is the most important base material for industrial chemistry, where it is often used to make more complex molecules through reactions of halogenation and chemical addition reaction.
Gas turbine
Tanks
The American M1 Abrams main battle tank is powered by a gas turbine of, that it is able to function also with a mix at 50% of wood powder and biodiesel, diesel fuel or kerosene. Its advantages over turbo-diesel engine, are the small size and light weight, the lack of a radiator. A setback is the high fuel consumption, since the turbine engine has not the ability to work at a low revolutions per minute rate, much lower than ideal, and during the march this engine consumes twice as much fuel as a modern turbo-diesel engine with intercooler and direct injection.Construction
Wood is relatively light in weight, because its specific weight is less than 500 kg/m³, this is an advantage, when compared against 2,000-2,500 kg/m³ for armed concrete or 7,800 kg/m³ for steel.Wood is strong, because the efficiency of wood for structural purposes has qualities that are similar to steel.
Material | E/f | - | - |
Concrete | 1250 | ||
Structural steel | Fe430 | 480 | |
Glued laminated timber | 470 | ||
Aluminium | 200 |
Bridges, levees, microhydro, piers
Wood is used to build bridges, as well as water and air mills, and microhydro generators for electricity.Housing
is used as a material in wooden houses, and other structures with a broad range of dimensions. In traditional homes wood is preferred for ceilings, doors, floorings and windows. Wooden frames were traditionally used for home ceilings, but they risk collapse during fires.The development of energy efficient houses including the "passive house" has revamped the importance of wood in construction, because wood provides acoustic and thermal insulation, with much better results than concrete.
Earthquake resistant buildings
In Japan, ancient buildings, of relatively high elevation, like pagodas, historically had shown to be able to resist earthquakes of high intensity, thanks to the traditional building techniques, employing elastic joints, and to the excellent ability of wooden frames to elastically deform and absorb severe accelerations and compressive shocks.In 2006, Italian scientists from CNR patented a building system that they called "SOFIE", a seven-storey wooden building, 24 meters high, built by the "Istituto per la valorizzazione del legno e delle specie arboree" of San Michele all'Adige. In 2007 it was tested with the hardest Japanese antiseismic test for civil structures: the simulation of Kobe's earthquake, with the building placed over an enormous oscillating platform belonging to the NIED-Institute, located in Tsukuba science park, near the city of Miki in Japan. This Italian project, employed very thin and flexible panels in glued laminated timber, and according to CNR researchers could brought to the construction of much more safe houses in seismic areas.
Shipbuilding
One of the most enduring materials is the lumber from virginian southern live oak and white oak, specially live oak is 60% stronger than white oak and more resistant to moisture. As an example, the main component in the structure of battle ship USS Constitution, the world's oldest commissioned naval vessel afloat is white oak.Woodworking
Woodworking is the activity or skill of making items from wood, and includes cabinet making, wood carving, joinery, carpentry, and woodturning. Millions of people make a livelihood on .
History of crisis in wood economies
Classical Greece
One of the most famous crisis of a wood-based economy is what happened in Classical Greece, where trees began to disappear specially in the areas of Attica, Boeotia and Peloponnesus where indiscriminate cutting of trees for several uses, associated to drought and wildfires led to a severe lack of timber in order to build lances, shields, ships, etc. and to a slow but progressive weakening in military and naval power of the peninsular kingdoms in Greece, that were overwhelmed by Epirus and by the Kingdom of Macedon, much more fertile lands because of their rainy winters. This process arrived to the apex with the conquest of Greece by Phillip II of Macedon.The secret weapon of the Sarissaphoros soldiers, commanded by Philipp II in the Battle of Chaeronea and in those that followed fought by Alexander the Great, was the sarissa, a type of pike, longer and stronger than the other Greek lances, obtained from the heavy and strong cornel wood.
Rapa Nui
, best known as "Easter Island", is a typical example of malthusianism, specifically how the exponential growth of a populace leads to the end of a renewable resource. At a certain point, the compelling societal need forces exploitation of the resource above and beyond the resource's natural rate of renewal.It has been calculated that after the year 1000, around 10 million palmtrees were cut in Rapa Nui, resulting in the erosion of the fertile land, and eventually to a desertification around the 15th century.. This provoked a population reduction from 15,000 to 2,500 individuals. Without palmtree wood, no boats, or lances could be constructed. Without palm fibers, construction of ropes and fishing nets halted. This led to a decrease in the local fish harvest, which in turn led to a decrease in the quantity of dietary protein available to the island's inhabitants. At the end, the society became an easy prey for hunger and civil war. From 1600 to 1700, the people became superstitious in a fanatical way. In the last moments, there was a disintegration of society and total chaos. The destruction of the traditional symbols followed, leading to the eventual extinction of the Moais civilization and culture, even if there was not any external human enemy.
In English
- Diamond, Jared. 2005. Collapse. How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. New York: Viking..
-
In Italian
- Conti, L., Lamera C. "Tecnologie dalle Origini al 2000", Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, 1981. ISBN
- Appunti del corso di formazione "Energie Alternative e Risparmio Energetico", presso Ordine degli Ingegneri di Padova, De Carli M 2006
- Frank Rosillo-Calle, Biomasse. Manuale per un uso sostenibile, Franco Muzzio editore,
- Rapporto "Lo sviluppo delle rinnovabili in Italia tra necessità e opportunità", Enea 2005
- Rapporto "Utilizzo energetico della biomassa", Opet, 2001
''In English:''
-
''In Italian:''