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Harvesting operations in eucalyptus plantations in Thailand

The eucalyptus has recently become an important timber species in Thailand, particularly in relation to timber supply within the pulp industry. Demand for raw material is continuously increasing, but harvesting techniques continue to rely on old-fashioned methods of harvesting, which are motor-manual and labour-intensive operations. These harvesting operations typically provide relatively low productivity and are time consuming. This study addressed the timber harvesting potential in Thailand including: average productivity, identifying ineffective work phases, and how work performance can be improved. Therefore, the study was conducted to analysis existing timber harvesting systems as a whole and compare alternatives, and to explore improvements in forest harvesting systems in Thailand through work study, working postures analysis, and simulation. Work study allowed the researcher to understand in detail the conventional harvesting systems and obtain information regarding work activities and time allocations. Harmful tasks and awkward working postures were evaluated by working posture analysis. Simulation allowed the researcher to examine the impact of changing harvesting systems.

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Additional Info

Field Value
Document type Reports, journal articles, and research papers (including theses and dissertations)
Language of document
  • English
Topics
  • Forest policy and administration
  • Logging and timber
Geographic area (spatial range)
  • Thailand
Copyright Yes
Access and use constraints

The Author hereby assigns to the Finnish Society of Forest Science (hereafter “Publisher”) right to publish this Contribution in the e-series Dissertationes Forestales. All dissertation summaries published in the Series shall be publicly available on the Internet according to the Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence.

The Author retains the copyright of his/her Contribution. The Publisher has the right to publish the Contribution and keep it available for the public in any current or future publishing format. Publisher may also transfer publishing rights and/or maintenance of the Dissertationes Forestales website to others who respect the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence.

If the Author deposits the Contribution in a personal, institutional, scientific, or professional repository, he/she shall use the final Publisher’s version of Contribution. Link to the original publication shall be provided using its DOI number.

The Author may grant wider reuse rights of the Contribution than provided by the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence.

In the event of receiving any request to republish all or part of the Contribution in a way not compatible with the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence, the Publisher shall endeavour to obtain the approval of the Author prior to giving any such permission.

Version / Edition N/A
License CC-BY-3.0-IGO
Author (individual) Nopparat Manavakun
ISBN number 978-951-651-444-7
ISSN number 1795-7389
Publication place Vantaa, Finland
Publisher Finnish Society of Forest Science
Publication date 2014
Pagination 111
Keywords V4MF,FLEGT,harvesting systems,time consumption models,productivity,simulation
Date uploaded July 5, 2018, 20:37 (UTC)
Date modified July 6, 2018, 17:50 (UTC)