This is not the first such piece
of hardware and certainly not the last. At
this point, it is fair to say that all that sunken timber is now becoming accessible
and we are gaining real mastery of marine based heavy equipment which makes
just about any problem accessible.
Again we see an industrial
problem tackled and solved over a long development cycle lasting decades
already. I saw the early proposals back
in the seventies. The lesson is to never
underestimate human ingenuity if there is a profit involved.
It looks good.
New Logging Equipment Harvests Underwater Forests
by Stephen
Messenger, Porto Alegre, Brazil on 07.21.11
As forests around the world continue to be cleared to meet the global
demand for timber, there remains millions of acres of trees that have so far been
out of reach -- because they're underwater. These great submerged forests are
the result of hydroelectric dams, which form lakes that have made harvesting
them for wood a challenging task. But now, thanks to advances in underwater
tree clearing technology, our planet's vibrant, oxygen producing forests could
enjoy a reprieve from the chainsaw.
Every year, millions of acres of living
forests are cleared -- but all the while, beneath the surface of man-made
lakes, there are countless trees stripped of leaves and wildlife awaiting some
better use. Amazingly, despite being submerged for often decades, these trees
are still well preserved enough to be used as lumber. Historically, trying to
tap into this unharvested resource had been laborious and dangerous work,
though new machinery seems to be changing all that.
According to a report
from Forbes, the latest innovation in underwater tree-clearing equipment is
a specially designed boom-saw designed by Canada 's Triton Logging, called
SHARC, and it might offer new hope to living forests slated for clearing.
SHARC is a barge plus custom excavator with a saw on the end that can
find, cut, and retrieve trees at depths even greater than 80 feet, using GPS,
video, and sonar.
The innovation may mean big money: The small private firm, backed by
institutional investors, estimates that 300 million trees worth $50 billion lie
underwater, mostly in lakes formed when dams were built. That's true of the Ghana
trees, which were flooded during a 1965 dam construction and are worth some $1
billion to $2 billion.
Here's SHARC in action:
Of course, SHARC isn't the first machine designed access the
treasure-trove of lumber that lies untouched in the deep. Five years ago,
Triton Logging began using afleet
of submarine lumberjacks, known as Sawfish, to clear underwater forests in British Columbia . With
some $50 billion worth of lumber beneath man-made lakes in that region of Canada
alone, the race to improve technology led to the most recent advancement.
Much of the harvest wood is destined to be shipped to places like
India, Korea, and China, were demand for lumber continues to rise as
manufacturing there increases -- which has been cited as a leading factor
contributing to deforestation throughout Asia and Oceania. By tapping into the
preserved, relatively lifeless forests under the word's unnatural lakes, living
forests in some of the most fragile ecosystems on the planet may stand a better
chance of avoiding the blade.
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