Price movements for wood fiber throughout North America were mixed in the 1Q 2018 with substantial increases seen in the Western US and Western Canada, while prices for softwood chips fell substantially in Eastern Canada, according to the North American Wood Fiber Review. The only region where wood prices remained practically unchanged was in the US South, where the pulp industry continues to have some of the lowest fiber costs on the continent.

Logs

In 1Q 2018, prices for wood chips in British Columbia and Western US increases 12% and 15%

Wood fiber costs for pulpmills in North America were mixed in the 1Q 2018 as compared to the 4Q 2017, according to the latest issue of the North American Wood Fiber Review (NAWFR). The biggest increases quarter-over-quarter were seen in British Columbia and the Western US, where prices for wood chips, the major fiber source for the two region’s pulpmills, increased by 12% and 15% respectively. Tight fiber supply, low fiber inventories, wildfires in the fall, reduced harvest levels and transportation challenges were all factors that contributed to the upward price pressure on both wood chip and pulplogs during the winter season.

In Eastern Canada, growing lumber production has created ample supplies of residual chips while demand for wood fiber has stagnated. This imbalance, building over the past 18 months, finally resulted in significant price declines when the annual price negotiations of 2018 were concluded. Wood chip prices in the 1Q 2018 were at their lowest level in over 30 years and the region’s pulpmills now has the lowest softwood fiber costs in North America.

In the continent’s largest forest industry region, the U.S. South, prices for softwood fiber have stayed quite stable for the past 18 months despite increased harvesting activities and a higher supply of sawmill residuals. Prices for pine pulplogs throughout 2017 and early 2018 have been at their lowest levels in five years in both the Southeastern and South Central sub-regions. While there were ample supplies of softwood fiber throughout the south in the 1Q 2018, the picture was different for hardwood fiber. The supply/demand balance for hardwood pulpwood, particularly in the Gulf states, was tighter than that of softwood because of continued strong demand for hardwood fiber by both pulpmills and chipping facilities, paired with constrained log supply. The limited supply of both logs and wood chips has resulted in upward prices pressure over the past six months, with average
prices in the South Central region reaching their highest levels in almost two years.

Following a notable increase in softwood fiber pricing in the US Northwest in the 4Q 2017, prices surged in the 1Q 2018, according to the NAWFR. Low pulplog inventories and limited opportunities for obtaining additional fiber volumes left fiber buyers scouring the region for pulplogs and scrambling to secure sufficient supplies of residual chips. The increases in fiber prices for both pulplogs and wood chips resulted in the highest price levels seen in the region for six years.