Leaving a legacy
| By Andrew Gomes, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Hawaiian Legacy Hardwoods has turned close to 1,000 acres of barren ranchland on the slopes of
Company executives believe they have started what can be a sustainable model that makes money and re-establishes koa forests where they long ago disappeared.
"We want to replicate this model,"said company CEOJeff Dunster. "We're willing to give the model away."
Dunster, a former stockbroker, co-founded Hawaiian Legacy with
The for-profit element is partly based on attracting wealthy individual or institutional investors to buy blocks of 100 trees intended for harvest.
The charitable piece attracts people or entities to pay to plant trees restricted from harvest. A portion of this so-called sponsorship fee goes to a charity chosen by those who pay for the trees.
Dunster said the model is fixed so that only 25 percent of trees planted will be investor trees for harvest.
One key to the agricultural aspect of the operation is collecting seeds from koa, a variety of acacia, that are remnants of prior forests that once existed on the site intended for reforestation.
On Hawaiian Legacy's land in the
Hawaiian Legacy selected seeds from what it deemed the best trees, and starts seedlings in nurseries before planting them in the ground. The company fertilizes the trees after planting but relies on rainfall for water.
To date, Hawaiian Legacy has planted 250,000 koa trees -- of which 75 percent, or 187,500, are sponsored "legacy"trees and 25 percent, or 62,500, are investor trees.
Dunster said the company expects to run out of land on its 1,200-acre parcel in 18 months, and that the company is oversubscribed from interested investors and sponsors.
"Right now we have more commitments for trees than we have land to put them on,"he said."We can't plant fast enough."
Hawaiian Legacy is exploring potential expansion sites on
Currently, Hawaiian Legacy has a 60-year lease on the 1,200 acres. Dunster added that it's possible negotiations over the Hamakua land lead to Hawaiian Legacy expanding around where it operates now.
Either way, the company intends to branch out and is willing to help guide other landowners interested in similar ventures. Dunster said the commercial demand for koa lumber is so high that he doubts growers will ever come close to meeting it.
To be sure, Hawaiian Legacy has not yet proved that its business model will succeed over the long term, given that agriculture is a risky business susceptible to pests, drought and other ecological threats.
There are also skeptics who praise Hawaiian Legacy's conservation aspect but question projected investment returns.
Hawaiian Legacy charges
The company also began hosting eco-tours in November, charging
Another new line of revenue started up in January with the company planting sandalwood trees next to legacy koa trees and charging
On the investment side, Hawaiian Legacy said it has taken in more than
The company this year charged
Investment tree sales are limited to what the federal
The limitation on who may invest is due to the risks involved and potential financial returns promoted by Hawaiian Legacy. In its investment materials, the company projects that 100 trees could "conservatively" return between
The projected earnings are based on several assumptions including marketable lumber yields, tree growth rates, mortality, koa wood price appreciation and harvesting fees.
Under Hawaiian Legacy's projections, its 62,500 investor trees would yield about
The koa lumber price Hawaiian Legacy uses rises from as low as
Retail prices today are largely between
Still, there is some caution and skepticism about projected financial returns from farmed koa.
"It is difficult to forecast koa economic planting outcomes because koa has never successfully been grown in a plantation through to successful harvest," the association reported. "However, it appears that with current koa pricing and careful attention to establishment costs, koa plantations can be economically viable."
HFIA notes that a tree's age is key to the value of koa wood, and that it takes 35 years before a koa tree might be of commercial value, according to what the trade group called a consensus among academics, forestry agency specialists and commercial foresters.
Hawaiian Legacy plans to thin its fledgling forest when trees are 8 years old to give remaining trees room to flourish.
Dunster contends that the koa cut down at that early stage will have commercial value. He also said trees are growing faster than the company anticipated, with some 4-year-old trees already 10 to 12 inches in diameter.
"Iwouldn't say a 12-year-old tree has value,"he said. "In today's market it doesn't."
HFIAwas involved in a demonstration project where woodworkers made products from "young-growth"koa that was 32 to 35 years old, and the results were mixed, according to association Executive Director
"There is a market for younger-growth koa; it's just not going to be the
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(c)2014 The Honolulu Star-Advertiser
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