Merkley y Wyden dan la bienvenida a la inversión federal en Oregón para reducir el riesgo de incendios forestales y mejorar las condiciones de los bosques

Washington, D.C. – Oregon’s U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden today announced nine federal grants awarded across Oregon that support innovation in the state’s wood products industry—creating jobs in rural Oregon, advancing research at Oregon State University and the University of Oregon, and reducing wildfire risks and improving forest conditions statewide.

The U.S. Forest Service grant program was created by the Ley de Innovación de la Madera; Merkley worked with Sen. Mike Crapo (R-ID) to mobilize a bipartisan coalition, including Wyden, to successfully advocate for the bill’s inclusion in the 2018 Farm Bill. The bill in part created the Wood Innovations Grant program that provides funding to accelerate the adoption of emerging wood technology for building construction. Merkley and Wyden advocated with the Forest Service for Oregon communities, companies and universities to bring a significant portion of the $7.62 million in grants from the program.

“Hemos estado trabajando para establecer a Oregón como un centro de productos madereros en masa, utilizando madera local y reforzando nuestra economía de productos forestales”. said Merkley, who serves on the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that funds innovation grant programs like these. “We’re supporting innovative manufacturing that creates jobs in rural parts of the state and lays the groundwork for future sustainable tall wood building construction across America. These projects demonstrate that Oregon is a thought leader in the wood products industry.”

“Oregon always stands at the forefront of innovation, and I’m glad the Forest Service has recognized the creativity and hard work throughout our state when it comes toexpanding markets for wood products and boosting markets for renewable wood energy,” dijo Wyden. “These grants will help to generate jobs in rural communities such as Prineville, Hood River and Pendleton and at the OSU and the U of O as well. And the benefits from the work done by all these grants will ripple out statewide with lower wildfire dangers, improved forest health and more.”

“Wood Innovation Grants are critical to our efforts in developing innovative mass timber and wood building solutions,” said Anthony S. Davis, interim dean at the Oregon State University of College of Forestry. “Thanks to Sen. Merkley’s and Sen. Wyden’s continued support, we have the ability to discover and test Oregon grown and built wood products that will provide sustainable construction alternatives while improving the lives of Oregonians.” 

“These funds will allow us to expand the uses for mass timber products by developing applications that will increase the resilience of multi-family housing units using Mass Plywood Panels made by Freres Lumber of Lyons, OR to provide for both energy and seismic retrofits and by employing genomic analysis of microbial communities on wood surfaces to demonstrate their suitability for increased deployment in healthcare facilities,” said Kevin Van Den Wymelenberg, professor of architecture at University of Oregon and Director of the Institute for Health in the Built Environment and the Energy Studies in Buildings Laboratory.

The Oregon projects receiving Wood Innovation grants are as follows:

 

Project Name

Recipiente

City, State

Forest Service Funds

Matching Funds

Prineville Renewable Energy Project Engineering and Design Study

City of Prineville

Prineville, Oregón, EE.UU.

$250,000

$125,000

Expanding Small Diameter Wood Processing Capacity in Hood River, Oregon

Neal Creek Forest Products

Hood River, OR

$247,378

$756,000

Overcoming Market Barriers to Increase Use of Structural Mass Timber in Healthcare Environments

Universidad de Oregon

Eugene, Oregón

$249,942

$125,000

Developing an application for Mass Plywood Panels in Seismic and Energy Wall Retrofit

Universidad de Oregon

Eugene, Oregón

$249,962

$125,007

Expanding Forest Biomass Pellet Manufacturing Capacity

Blue Mountain Lumber Products, LLC

Pendleton, OR

$205,100

$102,600

Replacing and Upgrading Head-Rig Scanner System

Blue Mountain Lumber Products, LLC

Pendleton, OR

$35,825

$147,800

Building Markets for Forest Restoration Wood

Sustainable Northwest

Portland, Oregón

$248,107

$228,816

Fire Performance of Connection Made up of Custom CLT Layups Utilizing Pine from Logs Harvested in Western Forest Restoration Programs

La Universidad Estatal de Oregon

Corvallis, OR

$250,000

$127,030

Installation of Wood Chip Dryer and Processing Equipment using Renewable Energy and Heat Provided by Wind River Biomass Utility

Smokehouse Products, LLC

Hood River, OR

$250,000

$950,000

 

Oregon has been at the forefront of developing mass timber products, including cross-laminated timber, mass plywood products, nail laminated timber, glue laminated timber, laminated strand lumber, and laminated veneer lumber. In addition to creating this grant program, the Ley de Innovación de la Madera establishes a new research and development program through the U.S. Department of Agriculture that focuses on developing the application of mass timber products for building construction; analyzing the safety of tall wood buildings; identifying building code modification for wooden buildings; and calculating the environmental footprint of wood buildings.

es_MXSpanish