Private Forests Tasmania welcomes new director, Dr Joanna Jones
Posted 17 June 2022
Joanna Jones brings extensive practical commercial skills from various agricultural disciplines to the PFT board.
Tasmania’s private forestry industry continues to grow strongly, with the private sector delivering nearly 75 per cent of forest products in Tasmania at a time of significant market demand.
Private Forests Tasmania has a clear priority to implement innovative policies to expand private forest resources sustainably.
This month PFT welcomes a new director, Dr Joanna Jones.
Dr Jones is a senior consultant with Pinion Advisory and an adjunct senior researcher with the University of Tasmania.
She co-owns and manages Fidelity Peonies and, with her husband, runs a family-owned dairy farm in the Derwent Valley.
Minister for Resources, Guy Barnett, said Dr Jones would bring extensive practical commercial skills from various agricultural disciplines to the PFT board.
“We welcome Dr Jones to the PFT Board where her skills in project management, farm-focused agricultural research and development and communications will be extremely valuable,” he said.
PFT chairman Evan Rolley welcomed Dr Jones appointment while visiting one of PFT’s demonstration sites, The Back Run at Ellendale.
The farm demonstration sites, funded via a grant by PFT with assistance from the Australian Government, help establish and integrate commercial trees on farms.
“Many agricultural businesses, organisations and markets have announced carbon-neutral policies and targets that will impact the supply chains,” Mr Rolley said.
“Trees on farms help landowners to be investment-ready for the emerging carbon-neutral economy and will help improve farm resilience by diversifying income through carbon storage and options for wood products.
“Jo’s experience in whole farm planning and understanding of agriculture in Tasmania, alongside her decade-long board experience, will assist PFT in delivering its strategic plan.”
“Her skills will complement the existing board’s forest industry strengths and help advance Private Forest Tasmania’s purpose to grow the state’s private forest resource in new and innovative ways with farming stakeholders.”
Dr Jones will join the board in a position made vacant by valued director Andrew Morgan’s term expiring.
Mr Morgan served on the PFT board for six years and the last four years as deputy chairman.
“Andrew has always been an active contributor and brought with him contemporary forestry and business knowledge,” Mr Rolley said.
“Andrew helped Private Forests Tasmania shape policies to showcase innovation and help expand sustainable private forestry in Tasmania.”
Dr Jones joined the board on June 27, 2022.
Share this Article
Latest Articles
-
19 December 2024
ActivAcre hits milestone, calls for more farmers to get on board
-
17 December 2024
Napier's leading the way in sustainable forestry and carbon-neutral farming
-
13 December 2024
Sound science needed to assess carbon impacts of timber harvesting
Archives
- Napier's leading the way in sustainable forestry and carbon-neutral farming
- Sound science needed to assess carbon impacts of timber harvesting
- Newly appointed TFFPN Board of Directors
- Graduate Certificate of Forestry Scholarship
- Forestry Australia Mentoring Program 2025
- Forest Industry Roundtable planning for the long term
- Eagle Management Constraint Period extended
- Successful private native forest management celebrated
- $15 million investment in new ship loader to boost Bell Bay's forestry exports
- Standing with Tasmania's forestry industry: buy local
- TFPA: Tasmanian Freight Equalisation Scheme needs a ground-up review
- AFCA Gala Dinner celebrates industry excellence
- Fire permits now required Statewide
- Forest leaders hone skills in sustainable native regrowth management
- Carbon methods for native forests must be ‘nature positive’
- Call for Expressions of Interest: Member, Private Forests Tasmania Board
- Private Forests Tasmania marks a year of leadership and innovation
- Bill passed to modernise private forestry regulations in Tasmania
- Next generation increasing access to tree seedlings for timber, biodiversity purposes
- Tasmanian forests and the carbon market: Barriers and opportunities
- What the 2024-25 Tasmanian Budget means for forestry
- Spring is the time for fuel reduction burning
- Primed for Growth: A situation analysis of the Tasmanian Forest and Wood Products Sector
- Audit requirements cut for low-risk plantation projects
- Guidance and support for landowners after damaging winds
- Forestry Australia welcomes further definition of active forest management
- Farm & Forest Mapper Tool highlighted at Rural Youth Tasmania's Young Farmer of the Year competition
- Senate Select Committee inquiry into the Tasmanian Freight Equalisation Scheme
- Timberlink announces new wood composite products brand
- Newly developed protocol a vital tool for safeguarding forestry industry
- Red Hot Tips: Fire management for Tassie farmers
- Bioenergy: Fuelling industries with trees
- Harvesting trees: What you need to know
- Shelterbelts: How are they contributing to farm systems?
- Infill plantings and remnant vegetation: Why biodiversity depends on a thriving understory
- Plantation planning: The key to a successful plantation
- Exciting interactive forestry knowledge hub launched
- $450,000 farm forestry grant recipients revealed
- Tasmanian primary producers, environment and industry to benefit from trees on farms
- Why farmers should plant trees now, and manage them for the mass timber buildings of the future
- PFT forester Stephen Clarke can help you capitalise on the extensive benefits of trees
- Private Forests Tasmania welcomes agriforester Molly Marshall
- Windbreaks and wildlife benefit better understood
- The effects of windbreaks on airflow, microclimates and crop yields
- Find out the socio-economic impacts of forestry
- Benefits of trees to reduce paddock water loss is considerable: Report
- Modelling the costs and benefits of agroforestry systems
- Market demand for plantation-grown wood - where we're at and where we're going
- PFT's Rob Smith offers his expertise to advance Tasmania and help the planet at the same time
- Find out what benefits are linked to planting trees on farms
- Understanding values behind farmer perceptions of trees on farms
- Report findings into economic impact of forestry in New Zealand released
- Farm-scale sediment sources: Tree harvesting, cattle and roads
- Study underway to improve durability to enhance the value of plantation, regrowth and regenerated eucalyptus
- Find out the biodiversity outcomes from eucalypt plantation expansion into agricultural landscapes
- Understand how trees improve the carbon balance - carbon investing improves your ROI from trees
- 10% multipurpose tree cover for every farm: A low risk, high opportunity first step