Tree deaths outpace growth two-to-one, speaker says; wildfire blamed, logging defended

Agriculture: House Committee · January 5, 2026

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Summary

An unidentified speaker, citing U.S. Forest Service reports, said tree mortality in national forests exceeds growth by two-to-one and attributed much of the loss to wildfire. The speaker said timber harvesting accounts for about 25% of net growth and called logging part of the solution.

An unidentified speaker, citing U.S. Forest Service reports, told the committee that tree mortality in national forests now exceeds tree growth by a ratio of two to one.

The speaker said the data — "According to US Forest Service reports, [tree] mortality for the first time, exceeds tree growth by 2 times" — shows a pressing shift in forest health and emphasized the scale of the problem by repeating that "Twice as many trees are dying in the national forests that are growing." The speaker attributed much of that mortality to wildfire.

The speaker contrasted wildfires with timber harvesting, saying "It's not timber harvesting" and providing numeric context: "Timber harvesting only represents 25% of the net tree growth and 7 times more trees are dying than are being harvested." The speaker then argued that logging should not be treated as the principal cause, saying, "Logging isn't the problem. In fact, it's a solution." These statements were presented as the speaker's characterization of the Forest Service data and of management options.

The transcript does not identify the speaker by name or affiliation, and it does not record supporting testimony, follow-up data, or a formal vote on management actions. No alternate explanations, rebuttals, or additional sources appear in the provided text.

Next steps were not specified in the excerpt; the remarks are presented in the transcript as a data-driven claim and a policy framing that would require further evidence and deliberation to translate into action.