Skip to main content
Login | Suomeksi | På svenska | In English

Browsing by Subject "MOTTI"

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Lallukka, Hermanni (2012)
    Energywood harvesting is increasing strongly due to promotion of renewable energy sources. As a part of the development the use of energywood thinning will increase and become more diverse. Therefore it is important to know the effects of the operation on merchantable yield and on profitability of silviculture. The objective of the study is to detect those effects of mechanised energywood thinning in young stands. For economical calculations the moment for decision making is set to the moment of the thinning. 30 young stands were chosen for the study. For forecasting stand development stand parameters were measured from each stand. The study was limited to mineral soil and to stands where dominat species was pine (Pinus sylvestris) or spruce (Picea abies). The stands were situated in Finland in the regions of Häme-Uusimaa, Kaakkois-Suomi, Etelä-Savo and Keski-Suomi. Stand development was forecasted using MOTTI software developed by Finnish Forest Resource Institute. Future harvesting yields were forecasted separately for each stand and for three different management alternatives. The three alternatives were energywood harvesting in a dense young stand, indutrialwood thinning in a dense young stand, and a management chain according to the finnish silvicultural recommendations. With the predicted harvesting yields, annual yields and net present values were calculated. The effects of harvesting damages were examined by a literature overview. Managing stands according to silvicultural recommendations gave excpectedly the best result. A considerable increase in energywood price would be needed for the alternative of energywood harvesting to be competitive in pine stands. In spruce stands it is an economically viable alternative with relatively low energywood price. This is mainly due to high yields of deciduous trees in dense spruce stands. Energywood harvesting is a good alternative for managing dense young stands that have been left without or with insufficient precommercial thinning. In these cases energywood harvesting generally leads to better yields than an industrialwood thinning. However, with the energywood prices used in this study, industrialwood thinning leads to higher earnings. Differences between the alternatives are low and an increase in energywood price would quickly turn the situation in favor of energywood thinning. Forest type does not have a significant effect on the differences between the management alternatives. According to the inspections of Forestry Development Centre Tapio, there are more harvesting damages in stands managed by energywood thinning than by industrialwood thinning. Losses in growth and wood quality due to harvesting damages are however minor according to literature overview, and therefore have no significant effect on the results of this study.
  • Laiho, Toni (2014)
    The aim of this study is to examine the profitability of cultivation and stand rotations of Norway spruce in Finland. This information is needed by the forest owners when making decisions on forest cultivation. The results were compared to previous studies and to silviculture recommendations published by the Forestry Development Centre TAPIO’s in 2006. Forest management chains used in this study were simulated with the Forest Research Institute’s Motti program. Six different management chains in two different forest types, Oxalis-Myrtillus (OMT) and Myrtillus (MT), were simulated in the thermal area of 1300 with planting density of 1300, 1700 and 2100 per hectare. Either one, two, three or four thinnings were done for each of the planting density variations. Based on the results from these cultivations, the spruce cycle was analysed by comparing the value of the growth to alternative rates of return. Profitability calculations were based on the Motti programme and timber stumpage prices were obtained from the Metinfo service. The results showed that the optimal rotation periods were in line with previous studies. The rotation periods settled between 60–90 years depending on the rate of return that was required. However, the results were not identical to the theoretical optimum models. The Motti program forest management recommendations, are in line with the previous studies when requiring a four percent return. Sensitivity analysis of prices and costs were calculated for the rotation and based on the results, even by varying the price and cost by one third, this had very little effect on the optimal rotation time. The most important factor for the rotation period is the function of the tree's growth, which of course, is affected by the forest management measures.