Sustainability in the Industry

Wood Processing

Impacts, Risks and Opportunities

Sustainability in Wood Processing

Wood is sustainable in three ways: it stores CO2, removes it from the atmosphere in the long term when installed and saves significant emissions as a replacement for more energy-intensive building materials such as steel or concrete. Substitution drives transformation.

Wood as a building material increases climate protection in construction and, as a material, promotes the bio-based circular economy. The primary goal of wood processing companies is to process wood from sustainable forestry in such a way that it can be used effectively as a carbon sink in applications for buildings, furniture or industrial applications and that wood residues are also largely used as materials. In our own production, it is important to produce in a climate-neutral manner. Many wood companies burn wood waste, use renewable energies, for example on roofs, and are mathematically climate-neutral.
Sustainability efforts are also aimed at extending the life of processed wood and increasing the cascading use of the material. Because only the longest possible use, reuse and recycling is the driving force for the bio-based circular economy based on wood. And the felling of trees that have grown for decades only makes sense ecologically if the wood is used for decades. What happens to forests if a world with 10 billion inhabitants switches to large-scale wood construction and wood applications? How is it possible to pressure the forest resource so that valuable ecosystems do not fall victim to excessive deforestation, as happens, for example, with soy in the Amazon or palm oil plantations in Indonesia? . A key may lie in hybrid systems in which wood is combined with other materials such as metals, clay or straw as crop waste for applications. Protecting forests from fire and excessive deforestation remains a key task for the industry. Transparency regarding origin and product-specific emissions, including upstream and downstream stages, is therefore very relevant. Ecologically harmful raw materials such as tropical wood from rainforest areas should be avoided. As a supplier to downstream industries such as the construction, furniture, paper and printing industries, the timber industry has a responsibility.

The industry includes, for example, sawmills and lumber mills, the production of wooden panels and structural parts as well as storage containers made of wood. Wood producing companies such as forestry companies, forest owners and forestry companies and wood trading companies are assigned to industry 2 “Forestry”.

Industry Materiality

Key Fields in the Industry 

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Resources

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Climate

 

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EU NACE Classification 

Industry NACE Classes

Unsure if the industry is the right one? A comparison with the EU’s granular NACE classification Rev. 2.1 provides clarity.

Included NACE classes in the industry

C 16.1 Sawmilling and planing of wood; processing and finishing of wood
C 16.11 Sawmilling and planing of wood
C 16.12 Processing and finishing of wood
C 16.2 Manufacture of products of wood, cork, straw and plaiting materials
C 16.21 Manufacture of veneer sheets and wood-based panels
C 16.22 Manufacture of assembled parquet floors
C 16.23 Manufacture of other builders’ carpentry and joinery
C 16.27 Finishing of wooden products
C 16.28 Manufacture of other products of wood and articles of cork, straw and plaiting materials

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