2018
DOI: 10.1111/joac.12294
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Financiers in the forests on Vancouver Island, British Columbia: On fixes and colonial enclosures

Abstract: Starting in the mid 2000s, a financial asset management company and institutional investors began to invest in timberlands in British Columbia, Canada's most western province. In a period of political economic crisis, investors looked to real assets—“dirt and trees” in the words of one research participant—as a means of accumulating capital through securing access to huge parcels of the most productive and valuable forestland in North America. This article analyses these investments as a socioecological fix fo… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Following the burst of the IT-bubble, investors’ interest for fixed, real assets such as real estate and natural resources increased (Lewis, 2005), which put an upward pressure on nominal forest land prices in several economies (Ekers, 2019). Swedish institutional investors became major forest owners in 2004 when Korsnäs and Stora Enso, in order to improve their balance sheets, put their forest assets (valued 17,7 billion SEK) in the newly created a holding company Bergvik Skog AB, of which half was owned and traded by institutional investors.…”
Section: Accumulation Regime Change and Industrial Restructuring In T...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Following the burst of the IT-bubble, investors’ interest for fixed, real assets such as real estate and natural resources increased (Lewis, 2005), which put an upward pressure on nominal forest land prices in several economies (Ekers, 2019). Swedish institutional investors became major forest owners in 2004 when Korsnäs and Stora Enso, in order to improve their balance sheets, put their forest assets (valued 17,7 billion SEK) in the newly created a holding company Bergvik Skog AB, of which half was owned and traded by institutional investors.…”
Section: Accumulation Regime Change and Industrial Restructuring In T...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A combination of less generous public support, stronger shareholder value norms, larger rates of financial value-extraction, but also a faster decline in paper demand, are seemingly important reasons for a faster forest industry decline in North America compared to Northern Europe. Compared to the US and Canadian forest industries (Ekers, 2019), the socioecological fix has not only benefited financial capital but also North European non-financial firms.…”
Section: Accumulation Regime Change and Industrial Restructuring In T...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A challenge in this research is comparing the harvesting volumes we have generated through the HBS with company records. IT and TimberWest are privately held companies owned by three public sector pension plans (Ekers 2019). Neither company provides any information on the size of their harvest.…”
Section: Harvesting Activities On Private Landmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically, forestry companies were given TFLs, essentially incredibly inexpensive 25‐year leases to public land, in return for including their private holdings in the licence. In the language of policy makers in BC, historically private forest land was treated “as if it was Crown land” insofar as it was bundled together with “public” land in TFLs and regulated through different iterations of the Forest Act and the Forest Practices Code (see Ekers 2019). The PMFLA only became meaningful if landowners could remove their private land from their TFLs.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%