4.7 Article

Impact of Facility Location on the Financial Performance of Integrated and Distributed LVL Production in Subtropical Eastern Australia

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13111903

Keywords

financial analysis; operations research; optimisation; log procurement; processing scale; forest industry

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) [FST/2019/128]

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In subtropical eastern Australia, hardwood sawmills are exploring the use of small logs in the manufacture of veneer-based engineered wood products. A mathematical model was used to estimate the financial performance of laminated veneer lumber (LVL) manufacture, with a focus on facility location and log procurement strategy. The study found that distributed production was more profitable when the LVL manufacturing facility was located far from the log resource, and that the level of value-adding and processing scale had a greater impact on financial performance than facility location.
In subtropical eastern Australia, the declining availability of traditional, large hardwood native forest logs has motivated hardwood sawmills to explore potentially utilising small logs in the manufacture of veneer-based engineered wood products (EWPs), such as laminated veneer lumber (LVL). An aspatial mathematical model that maximises net present value (NPV) over a 30-year project life has been applied to estimate the financial performance of LVL manufacture in this region. Of particular interest was how facility location affected financial performance, and whether distributed production of veneer (close to the log resource) and LVL (distant from the log resource) may be more profitable than integrated production under some circumstances. While integrated production of veneer and LVL near the resource maximised NPV, distributed production was found to be more profitable than integrated production in situations where the LVL manufacturing facility had to be located relatively far from the resource. Nevertheless, the level of value-adding and processing scale had a greater impact on financial performance than facility location. The analysis also highlighted that log procurement strategy substantially affected financial performance. Encouragingly for forest growers and wood processors, utilising large volumes of small diameter logs, was important for maximisation of NPV of larger-scale LVL facilities.

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