Forestnet Media Podcast

Why John Deere Is Betting Big on Automated Forestry

26 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why John Deere Is Betting Big on Automated Forestry

Descripción

Mary Pat Tubb never planned on running John Deere’s global forestry division. She got there through a mix of unexpected turns, a bad fit in design engineering, and a strong pull toward solving problems on the factory floor. In this episode, we sit down with Mary Pat Tubb, VP of Global Forestry at John Deere, live at the Oregon Logging Conference. She shares her path from a small town in Wisconsin to leading one of the most recognized brands in the world, and what the industry may be missing about the next generation. We also get into what’s happening right now. An aging workforce. Fewer operators. Tariffs putting pressure on margins. And the impact on the communities built around logging.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Forestnet Media Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

11 episodios

episode The Forestry Machine Made From A Tank | KMC Max artwork

The Forestry Machine Made From A Tank | KMC Max

The tank-inspired forestry machine is BACK. Well, technically an APC, but still. Alex and Alejo didn't just acquire a brand. They flew to a remote Canadian town, bet on forgotten technology built from Vietnam War tank DNA, and moved manufacturing to Uruguay to take it global. The KMC Max isn't a forestry machine. It's not a firefighting machine. It's a platform, and that distinction is exactly why these two think they've cracked a problem the mainstream brands refuse to solve. We get into the brutal economics of why "build-to-purpose" is failing contractors, how a company from one of the world's smallest countries is muscling into North American markets, and why the worst market conditions in years might actually be the perfect storm to relaunch a legend.

17 de mar de 202627 min
episode Why This Mill Survives When Others Don't | Bhavjit Thandi, Richmond Plywood artwork

Why This Mill Survives When Others Don't | Bhavjit Thandi, Richmond Plywood

'Making forestry sexy again' That’s the bold mission Bhavjit Thandi is on as the new face of Richmond Plywood. Most CFOs stay in the boardroom, but 38-year old Bhavjit Thandi hit the mill floor on day one to understand the 70-year-old employee-owned co-op where workers take out mortgages just to get in. We dive into how this "shareholders on the floor" co-op model powers a zero-waste juggernaut that invests millions in automation and hiring more workers while other mills go dark. Expect hot takes on the dangerous "gray market" imports threatening Canadian construction and the brutal reality of battling the world's most expensive fiber costs. Bhavjit pulls no punches on government red tape, the Trump factor, and why Richply refuses to shut down even when demand tanks.

11 de feb de 202649 min
episode Stanley Park’s Looper Moth Crisis: The Other Side of the Story artwork

Stanley Park’s Looper Moth Crisis: The Other Side of the Story

This episode explains how wildfire risk in British Columbia is shaped by both climate trends and a century of fire suppression, and what that means for urban forests, hazard abatement and provincial policy. In conversation with Bruce Blackwell, M.Sc [http://M.Sc]., R.P.F., R.P.Bio [http://R.P.Bio]., Principal of Blackwell Consulting Ltd., we cover frontline experience from the Stanley Park hemlock looper response to municipal wildfire mitigation and watershed risk work. You’ll hear practical, sector‑relevant analysis on tools and constraints: when thinning or prescribed burning is appropriate, the economics and technology gaps for recovering small‑diameter biomass, how conservation reserves can still require active mitigation, and why provincial policy (stumpage, AAC assumptions and regulatory design) matters for competitiveness and long‑term resilience.

26 de ene de 202647 min