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Plantation Management

Plantation Management

OneFortyOne is committed to managing our plantations responsibly. We produce high-quality wood fibre while  providing stewardship over the air, water, and soil on which we all rely.

We work actively with the forestry industry at a local and national level to drive improvements in forest management for a safe and sustainable future. 

We maintain certifications across our entire estate in Australia and New Zealand, and aim to continue raising our standards. We are committed to sustainable forest management practices, as laid out in these certifications, as the foundation of the environmental credentials of our renewable timber products. 

Australian Certifications

Our Australian forests located in the Green Triangle meet the globally-recognised Australian Standard® for Sustainable Forest Management (AS 4708), which tests how sustainably we manage our forests, checking off nine key criteria and 57 key requirements. 

Find out more about our certifications in Australia.

New Zealand Certifications

In New Zealand, Nelson Management Limited is certified as meeting the Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC-C074692) standard for forest management. The forests comply with the internationally-agreed ’10 principles of responsible forest management’, including: upholding Indigenous peoples’ rights; community and workers’ rights; maintaining high conservation value forests; and maintaining the ecosystem.  

Find out more about our certifications in New Zealand.



OneFortyOne acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and their deep connections to land, water, and community. We pay our respect to Elders past and present and extend that respect to all First Nations people today.

In Aotearoa New Zealand, Māori communities have a strong spiritual connection between people and the land – the wellbeing of one sustains the wellbeing of the other. We strive to build meaningful relationships with iwi as tangata whenua (people of the land/region), to be responsible intergenerational kaitiaki (stewards/guardians) of the land where our forests grow.