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AAP
AAP
Environment
Samantha Lock

'Dying industry': taxpayers prop up native tree logging

The Frontier Economics research found native forest logging to be 'an unnecessary economic burden'. (HANDOUT/ANDREW KAINEDER)

Logging in native forests across NSW has cost the taxpayer millions to support as critics call on the government to join Victoria and Western Australia in phasing out the industry.

The state's main supplier of native timber received around $250 million in grants since 2020, while its hardwood division lost nearly $30 million in the last two years, according to a report released on Friday.

The research, prepared by Frontier Economics for Nature Conservation Council NSW, found the native-forest logging industry showed poor financial performance across all Australian jurisdictions and provided "little to no financial returns".

"This places an unnecessary economic burden and risk to state governments, whilst also having a negative impact upon native forests and the wildlife that call them home," it said.

Nature Conservation Council NSW chief Jacqui Mumford said the government was wasting millions of dollars propping up a dying and destructive industry.

"In what other instance is it acceptable for a company to run at an almost $30 million loss after being given $250 million in taxpayer money?" she said.

Ms Mumford urged the government to make a plan for transition similar to Victoria and WA.

The report said the state-owned Forestry Corporation NSW was facing many of the same challenges as VicForests, which recorded a loss of $54.2 million according to its last annual report.

A Forestry Corporation NSW spokesperson described the report's financial analysis  as "incorrect and misleading".

 "It falsely conflates the cost of managing public land on behalf of and for the benefit of the NSW community with the cost of harvesting renewable timber," the spokesperson told AAP in a statement.

The corporation recently came under the spotlight for failing to protect a threatened marsupial glider species from logging after it was found to have surveyed for the nocturnal animal during the day.

Victoria in May said it would end native timber harvesting by 2024, four years earlier than planned, claiming the sector had become unviable due to ongoing legal action.

Western Australia is also phasing out native logging.

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