The American Forest Foundation, Enviva Holdings, LP and The Nature Conservancy Announce Partnership for Forest Certification and Habitat Restoration

Today, the American Forest Foundation (AFF) and Enviva Holdings, LP announced a multi-year partnership to help private forest landowners across the Florida panhandle certify their forests are sustainably managed, and restore longleaf pine forests and improve wildlife habitat. AFF is a leading forest conservation organization specializing in helping to keep family owned forests productive for wildlife and clean water, as well as for wood supply. Enviva is the world’s largest manufacturer of industrial wood pellets.

The partnership, which will also include The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and other partners, will focus its efforts across 16 counties in the Florida panhandle, with a special focus on the area surrounding Cottondale, FL.

“We are proud to partner with AFF, TNC, and others to help private forest owners certify their forests as sustainably managed and to restore longleaf pine forests,” said Jennifer Jenkins, Enviva’s Chief Sustainability Officer. “We have already helped small private forest owners certify more than 22,000 acres under the American Tree Farm System®(ATFS). We are excited to help increase Tree Farm certification and longleaf restoration on private lands in Florida.”

The project will begin with a 38-acre demonstration site, created on The Nature Conservancy’s Apalachicola Bluffs and Ravines Preserve, where landowners can learn more about the longleaf ecosystem and the practices needed to sustain it. In the surrounding area, landowners will be encouraged to create or improve longleaf pine forests, support forest biodiversity, and become certified in the American Tree Farm System. ATFS is an internationally recognized sustainable forestry certification program specifically designed for family and small forest owners, which is administered by AFF.

“The Conservancy is pleased to demonstrate the lessons we’ve learned in nearly 30 years of longleaf habitat restoration. Private landowners will be an important part of bringing this imperiled forest back to prominence and that starts with technical assistance,” said Brian Pelc, Restoration Project Manager at The Nature Conservancy.

Last year, AFF released the Southern Wildlife At Risk: Family Forest Owners Offer a Solution report, which found that family forest owners, which own nearly 60 percent of the forests across the South, including in the Florida panhandle, are key to ensuring the sustainability of these woodlands. According to the report, 87 percent of landowners surveyed said that protecting and improving wildlife habitats is the top reason they own land. Seventy-two percent have already conducted one or more forest practices for wildlife, and 73 percent stated they want to do more in the future.

Landowners cite an uncertainty about whether they are doing right by their land and the cost of management as barriers.

In response to this, AFF launched a series of projects across the South to help landowners overcome these barriers to management, and address some of the major threats impacting wildlife habitat and forest health such as invasive species, drought and watershed management.

“Landowners want to do right by the land; we hear this from them directly every day," said Tom Martin, president and CEO of AFF. “But not all landowners have the expertise or the funds to implement the practices needed to create healthy forest habitat. But when these barriers are removed – when we provide technical assistance through projects like this, or when they have the needed funds, whether from cost-share assistance or from markets for wood, such as Enviva has created - we see a significant increase in the landowners taking an active role in their forests and in creating the needed habitat for wildlife.”

Enviva, which uses small trees and brush to make wood pellets, provides a unique market for landowners who are working to improve forest health. Over the past few decades, small-diameter and low-value wood markets have been in decline, material that needs to be removed to promote growth of high-grade trees. This, plus other factors over time, have caused many stands of longleaf pine to become overgrown, which shades out the plant community on the forest floor and reduces habitat value. Expanding the small-diameter and low-value wood market not only provides an outlet for this material, but also provides landowners with the income needed to afford management.

About the American Forest Foundation

The American Forest Foundation (AFF), a forest conservation organization, works on the ground with families, partners and elected officials to promote stewardship and protect our nation’s forest heritage. A commitment to the next generation unites our nationwide network of forest owners working to keep our forests healthy and producing the clean water, wildlife habitat and sustainable wood supplies that all Americans count on from forests.

About Enviva Holdings, LP

Enviva Holdings, LP is the world’s largest producer of wood pellets, a renewable and sustainable energy source used to generate electricity and heat. Through its subsidiaries, Enviva Holdings, LP owns and operates plants in the Southeastern United States that produce nearly 3 million metric tons of wood pellets annually. We export our pellets primarily to power plants in the United Kingdom and Europe that previously were fueled by coal, enabling them to reduce their lifetime carbon footprint by about 80 percent. We make our pellets using sustainable practices that protect Southern forests. And we employ about 600 people and support many other businesses in the rural South, where jobs and economic opportunity are sometimes scarce. Enviva Holdings, LP conducts its activities primarily through two entities: Enviva Partners, LP, a publicly-traded master limited partnership (NYSE: EVA), and Enviva Development Holdings, LLC, a wholly-owned private company. To learn more about Enviva Partners, LP, please visit our website at www.envivabiomass.com and follow us on Twitter (@EnvivaBiomass).