Chamber Granada has hosted this Friday the conference ‘Industry for sustainable construction with wood’, in which the LIFE Wood for Future/Madera para el Futuro project has presented to 50 entrepreneurs and investors the business opportunity that would represent in Granada the installation of a factory of laminated poplar beams for sustainable construction. The Association of Builders and Developers of Granada and the Andalusian Sustainable Construction Cluster collaborated in the organization of the event.
The European Union has recently granted funding to the LIFE project developed by the University and the Provincial Council of Granada together with the University of Santiago de Compostela, the Confederation of Organizations of Foresters of Spain (COSE) and the spin-off 3edata Environmental Engineering. Its objective is the recovery of poplar groves in the Vega de Granada through the valorization of poplar wood by means of new structural technical wood products.
In the presentation of the conference, the treasurer of the Chamber of Commerce of Granada, Christian López Carbonne, stressed that sustainability is one of the strategic axes in which companies in Granada have to work “in search of competitiveness”. In this sense, he was pleased to be able to present in the Chamber “a development project that combines environmental recovery with the generation of wealth and employment”.
The coordinator of LIFE Wood for the Future, Professor of Applied Physics at the University of Granada Antolino Gallego, has introduced this demonstration project of climate change mitigation, sustainable forest management and cascade use of solid biomass that has funding from the European Union for the next four years and has aroused the interest of local and regional institutions for their ability to boost the local economy, combat rural depopulation and reverse the high levels of air pollution in the metropolitan area of Granada.
José Manuel Iglesias, president of the Galician Wood and Design Cluster, shared his experience and invited interested businessmen and investors to get to know the Galician wood industry, which is mainly based on pine and eucalyptus. The cluster brings together more than 3,000 companies from the entire Galician wood chain -sawmills, beam, board, veneer and pulp mills, furniture and contract companies, pellets and biomass-, which last year had a turnover of almost 2,000 million euros and employed 18,000 people.
“If the 19th century was the century of steel and the 20th century was the century of concrete, experts agree that the 21st century is the century of wood,” said Iglesias, who highlighted its environmental properties – it is renewable, biodegradable and neutral in greenhouse gas emissions, the paradigm of the circular economy – as well as its potential to generate wealth and jobs in rural areas.
Iglesias stressed the importance of cooperation between entrepreneurs who, in the case of Galicia, has managed to attract the support of the regional administration and change the social image of the timber sector as a “predator” of the forest that was held a few years ago by a sector that creates jobs, sets population, contributes to combating climate change and keeps the forest care, preventing forest fires.
“Andalusia has enormous potential: it has trees, entrepreneurs and more than enough knowledge” to develop the structural wood sector, he said. In addition, having the LIFE Wood for the Future project “is an opportunity, because entrepreneurs will be able to test this tool to test their business plans”.
For his part, Manuel Guaita, director of the Structural Wood Engineering Platform (PEMADE) of the University of Santiago de Compostela, partner of LIFE Wood for the Future, explained that one of the objectives of the project is to characterize the MC poplar clone, which has excellent qualities for incorporation as a structural material in the construction of buildings and has the economic and environmental advantage of being a “zero kilometer” raw material.
Guaita has highlighted that the creation of a poplar laminated wood factory could generate “a bioeconomy at local level”, in a market of high demand due to the community regulations that require the reduction of the carbon footprint in the construction sector, which implies replacing materials such as cement or steel, which emit large amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere, with others such as wood, which not only do not emit CO2 but also capture it and keep it stored throughout the useful life of the buildings and, later, can be recycled in other products.
In Andalusia, he recalled, there is no factory of these characteristics, but the technological and industrial process is developed in other communities, such as Galicia or the Basque Country, where such plants have been operating for years, so the incorporation of machinery and technical staff would not pose any obstacle.
The 9th edition of the LIFE Wood For Future Newsletter is now available, where you can consult the latest news of the project.
By Antolino Gallego Molina Coordinator of LIFE Wood for Future Published in Opinión de Ideal on 01/13/2025
La calidad del aire en la arboleda y sus alrededores se mantuvo “buena” el 97% del tiempo, frente a los registros de las estaciones de medición de Granada Norte (37%) y el Palacio de Congresos (26%) “El chopo en Granada es un cultivo estratégico frente a la contaminación y debería recibir ayudas públicas”, subraya Antolino Gallego, coordinador del proyecto LIFE Madera para el Futuro, promotor del estudio
20 students of the Geography and Land Management Degree of the University of Granada have visited today Friday, December 13, 2024, the poplar grove area of Fuentevaqueros, as part of a field visit to learn about different projects in the Vega de Granada, organized by Professor Helios Escalante.
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