Georgia is one of the leading states for forestry, ranking first in annual harvest volume and the export of forest products. But a recent rash of paper mill closures coming on the heels of Hurricane Helene, which decimated trees across much of Georgia in 2024, has brought the industry to a crisis point.


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Last week, in the final days of Georgia’s legislative session, lawmakers passed several bills to try to help.

Among them is a measure that would allow forest landowners who get the state’s conservation tax benefits to also take part in carbon markets. (Researchers and industry groups are working to establish a Georgia-specific carbon credit market.) They also passed a tax credit update aimed at attracting forestry manufacturers to Georgia and a bill to block local governments from banning mobile sawmills on agricultural land. Another legislative effort, a bill to eliminate sales tax on timber harvesting, cleared the state House but failed to pass the Senate.

The state budget also set aside nearly $9 million for research into replacing fossil fuel byproducts with wood pulp to make things like textiles and pharmaceuticals.

Governor Brian Kemp has already signed the budget bill including the research funds. He has until May 12 to sign or veto the other bills.

Most of Georgia’s forests — about 92 percent — are privately owned, and most owners are individuals or families, not large corporations, according to the Georgia Forestry Association. That means decisions about how to manage the land, including whether to

replant trees after harvesting or after a hurricane, come down to what makes financial sense for individuals who are often counting on their trees to fund college tuition or retirement.

Paper mill closures diminished a key source of revenue for those landowners, and if they can’t make money from the trees themselves, industry experts warn, they may sell the land to developers.

“Forest owners have a tremendous amount of pressure on them to give in to urban growth or to turn over their land to maybe an annual crop,” said Chris Luettgen, who works in the Renewable Bioproducts Institute at Georgia Tech. “But some of this land is perfect for trees and not really too easy to grow a crop on. And so they’re kind of stuck.”

The struggles of the industry are also a climate problem: The state’s forests that are managed for commercial products offset about a third of Georgia’s greenhouse gas emissions, according to research from Drawdown Georgia.

The research money approved in the state budget will fund the initiative that Luettgen is working on at Georgia Tech. He and his team will take the material that’s used to make paper and cardboard — sawdust, bark and chips left over from cutting trees down into neat pieces of lumber — and develop uses that can be scaled up.

One such product is acetaminophen, the drug better known as Tylenol, which is derived from petrochemicals that are separated from crude oil as it’s processed into gasoline. Researchers have demonstrated in the lab that the necessary fossil fuel molecule can be replaced with one derived from wood, Luettgen said. They’re also working on a replacement for nylon, which also comes from fossil fuels.

“Things that typically have come from fossil fuels and the cracking of crude oil we believe we can instead make out of wood-based products,” said Luettgen.

This coverage is made possible through a partnership between WABE and Grist, a nonprofit environmental media organization.

Type of Story: News

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

Emily Jones covers climate change and climate solutions as part of a partnership between WABE and Grist. She previously covered the Georgia coast and hosted “Morning Edition” for Georgia Public...