
Forest Conference between Rios 2024
XXXVIII Forest Days of Entre Ríos October 4, 2024 The forest days of Entre Ríos are held in the city of Concordia, Entre Ríos, Argentina, in an uninterrupted way since 1986, always aiming to disseminate and exchange information between all members of the forestry sector.
Activity Program 20247: 30-8:15: public reception and registration8: 15-8:30: Welcome Words (EEA Director- President Aianer)8:30 - 9:10: Forests and plantations against droughts and heat waves: the challenges of climatic intelligent forestry to adapt productive systems to climate change. Dr. María Elena Fernández (INTA -conicet)9:10 - 9:50: From the footprint to the opportunity, ecological strategies for commercial success. Mg. Lic. Mariano Minaglia of Inti Enti Ríos9:50 - 10:05: Questions10:05 - 10:35: Coffe Break10: 35 - 11:15: Talk 3: Standardization in wood preservation and preservation of woods with autoclave: full cell process, market, product record. Gonzalo Andres Leguizamón. (IRAM Standardization Coordinator) and Guillermo Cesar Malavasi (Director Tefquim S.A.)11: 15-11: 55: Talk 4: ?A path to Forest Industria Argentina? Mora Alfonsín (Executive Director of Argencon)11:55 - 12:10: Questions12:10 to 13:20 LunchParallel events and visits13: 40: Field Day - Visits13:40 to 16:00. Parallel event: Oregon cutting maintenance course. Training in sharp and security in Harvester processors. Dissertans: Pablo Balbi Munditol S.A.I.C.E.F.E.I. AND COINSA S. AENCUENTRO IN: CTM HALL13:20 to 15:20: View Museum of the Salto Grande dam and visit to the dam:13:40 to 4:00 p.m.: Visit to EGger Board Manufacture Plant14:00 to 16:00. View of forest plantations of the Argentine Forestry Company (Silviculture and Management)
IT MAY INTEREST YOU

They play a crucial role in the conservation of forest ecosystems Nature is full of wonders and surprising processes that often go unnoticed. One of these phenomena is the ability of a small animal to plant millions of trees every year, playing a crucial role in the conservation of forest ecosystems.

Elegant, ecological and resistant: the wood treated with the millenary technique called Yakisugi challenges the weather and the passage of time. In the world of design and construction, a Japanese ancestral technique is gaining prominence. This is the Yakisugi (also known as Shou Sugi Ban), a method that consists in burning the surface of the wood to make it more resistant and attractive. Although it may seem contradictory, exposing wood to fire gives natural protection against moisture, insects and deterioration over time.

In the world there are millions of forests. Some are close to urban centers, others in remote and inaccessible places, but they all fulfill a key role: maintain the balance of the planet. They are literally the lung of the earth. When talking about a new forest, the first thing that comes to mind is usually reforestation, a recent plantation or the recovery of an area razed by fire. But this discovery is on another way. It is not a forest sown recently. It is an old forest, which was there for thousands of years, buried under the ice. And now, with the thaw caused by global warming, he has emerged again.