Objectivist
Banned
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2009
- Messages
- 3,716
That's not always the case. The new clearance could be used as farmland, replanted as you suggest, remain undeveloped due to lack of further capital or calamity, or put to any number of other uses. With only the commodity value of timber dictating the relative value of forestation, you're left with an economic model controlling an environment, which is quite possibly an unsustainable scenario, but perhaps not.
Here's a question I'd pose: What happens to the nearly one-fifth of the country's land area that is owned by the Department of the Interior if/when it cedes control to private interests?
Forestry only has problems when regulations get in the way, many burn areas could be harvested regularly and then replanted but the government holds up harvesting and bug infestations occur making the lumber useless. Eco-nuts doing their best to screw capitalism. Replanting brings back the forest much quicker too and helps save the topsoil.