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| Home > Final Report > SOCIO-1 |
The model was estimated based on land use patterns recorded in 1982, 1987, and 1992 by the National Resource Inventory (NRI) [see Hardie and others (2000) for modeling details]. Detailed land use categories were lumped into four classes: urban/residential, cropland/pasture, forest, and other. The urban/residential class includes areas in transportation and other corridors. The other class can be considered a transitional zone where land use is unclear due to changing conditions.
Before land uses could be projected, we had to forecast the factors that drive changes. Accordingly, we acquired county-level forecasts of population density and personal income and developed forecasts of housing values.
Two core projections were developed to (1) isolate the influence of general economic and population growth on the region and (2) completely assess land use changes that account for market responses to increased scarcity of timber as rural land is developed. The two core projections were defined for the following scenarios:
Urban growth scenario—An initial scenario was developed assuming that the population, income, and housing value forecasts are correct and that the relative positions of timber and agricultural markets do not change in the future. Effects of population growth and economic growth on urban land uses are estimated.
Base scenario—A scenario was also constructed to evaluate how rural land uses might be influenced by a relative shift in returns to agricultural and timber management. This scenario assumes that the population and economic change forecasts in the urban growth scenario hold and that the real price of softwood timber will increase by 35 percent by 2020, consistent with timber market forecasts developed in chapter 13. Agricultural returns are held at their 1992 levels. This scenario was built by imbedding the land use model described here within the timber market model as described in chapter 13. This procedure allowed land use, timber management, timber harvesting, and timber prices to be jointly and consistently determined. [See chapter 13 for a detailed description of modeling assumptions with respect to timber productivity, timber demand, and other factors. See Murray and others (2001) for a description of how these models are linked together.]
A sensitivity analysis was conducted to see how land uses would be affected by different forecasts for timber and agricultural prices. Results show where rural land use may be most sensitive to timber market changes in the South.
plotted. Changes in timber and agricultural prices over time were also analyzed.
| Glossary | Sci.Names | Process | Comments | Draft Report |
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content: David N. Wear |
created: 4-OCT-2002 |