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For approximately four decades, the West Virginia Hardwoods Center at West Virginia University (WVU) has focused on one of the state's abundant natural resources. Dr. Joe McNeel, director of the Appalachian Hardwood Center and professor of Wood Science and Technology, leverages his experience and dedication to the state's hardwoods to help create and promote new products. Out of these efforts has grown a sustainable, innovative wood product as strong as steel and concrete and uses technology to advance this growing industry. "We have about 80 percent of the state that is forest, so we have a tremendous resource here. A lot of people like to use the growth to harvest ratio to estimate how much drain is occurring in a forest. Within the state, almost every species is well over a 2:1 growth to harvest ratio. This indicates we are growing twice as much wood as we're currently harvesting. So we have a resource that is not only sustainable but is available to harvest in great quantities without really affecting the sustainability of that forest." Dr. Joe McNeel Innovators and Entrepreneurs is a bi-weekly segment of the daily304 that features discussions and wisdom from West Virginians who have built their companies and launched new ideas here in the Mountain State.
For approximately four decades, the West Virginia Hardwoods Center at West Virginia University (WVU) has focused on one of the state's abundant natural resources. Dr. Joe McNeel, director of the Appalachian Hardwood Center and professor of Wood Science and Technology, leverages his experience and dedication to the state's hardwoods to help create and promote new products. Out of these efforts has grown a sustainable, innovative wood product as strong as steel and concrete and uses technology to advance this growing industry. "We have about 80 percent of the state that is forest, so we have a tremendous resource here. A lot of people like to use the growth to harvest ratio to estimate how much drain is occurring in a forest. Within the state, almost every species is well over a 2:1 growth to harvest ratio. This indicates we are growing twice as much wood as we're currently harvesting. So we have a resource that is not only sustainable but is available to harvest in great quantities without really affecting the sustainability of that forest." Dr. Joe McNeel Innovators and Entrepreneurs is a bi-weekly segment of the daily304 that features discussions and wisdom from West Virginians who have built their companies and launched new ideas here in the Mountain State.