Australasia's home for timber news and information

Final felling figures for Sweden in 2019 decreased

Swedish forest owners reported 262,532 hectares for final felling in 2019. This was a decrease of 10% compared with 2018. In addition, they applied for permits for felling on 3022 hectares of mountainous forest and on 1461 hectares of valuable broad-leaved forest. Infestations of bark beetle and storm felling affected notifications in 2019. Source: Timberbiz

The reduction in the area reported for felling is partly due to large areas of forests being damaged by fire in 2018.

Southern Norrland was the region most affected with a lot of notifications immediately after the fires, which is probably the reason why notifications decreased by as much as 22% in 2019.

In Northern Norrland and Götaland, the reported area decreased by 10% and 14% respectively.

In Svealand, on the other hand, the reported area increased by 10%.

The differences compared with 2018 were particularly noticeable at the beginning of the year when a storm brought increased notifications in Västerbotten County, as did a storm in the counties of Stockholm, Uppsala, Södermanland and Västmanland.

In total for the full year 2019, notifications decreased in 16 out of 21 counties. The five counties where notifications increased are all in Svealand. Never have there been such large areas notified as in 2019 in the counties of Södermanland and Uppsala.

The number of applications in 2019 was 64,686, which was 4% lower than in 2018.

In 2019, the Swedish Forest Agency received applications for permits for final felling in mountainous forests on 3022 hectares of productive forest land. This is a decrease of 11% compared with 2018.

In 2019, the area of the application for permits for final felling of valuable-broad-leaved-forest increased by 22% to 1,461 hectares.

In 2019, forest owners reported and applied for the felling of 6632 hectares of productive forest land for purposes other than timber production. The majority of this area, 6199 hectares, was in so-called normal forest (according to Section 14 of the Forestry Act), 292 hectares in mountainous forests and 142 hectares in valuable-broad-leaved forest.

Compared with last year, the reported area within ordinary forest decreased by 10%. In mountainous forests, it increased by 25% and in hardwood forest it increased by 69%.