Increase in wood removed from Irish forests, figures show

Wood removed from Irish forests increased by 18% from 4.4 million cubic metres in 2024 to 5.2 million cubic metres in 2025, according to the CSO.

​Wood in its natural state was removed, valued at €238 million, which is an increase of 1% from €236 million. Although it is a 6% decrease from a high of €253 million in 2022.

​When it came to privately owned forests, removals were 2.9 million cubic metres, accounting for over half of the total removals in 2025.

​In general, the CSO recorded roundwood removals, which are wood in its natural state, and 0% of the removals were Coniferous roundwood.

​Niamh Shanahan, Statistician at the CSO, commented on the release. She said: “In 2025, 5.2 million cubic metres of roundwood, which is wood in its natural state, was removed from Irish forests (See Table 1A).

​“This was up 18% compared with 2024, when 4.4 million cubic metres were removed, and was the highest volume of roundwood removed across the 2015-2025 time series. The impact of Storm Éowyn in early 2025 likely impacted the increase in roundwood removed from Irish forests.

“Privately-owned forests provided the majority of the wood, accounting for 57% of the total wood removed, with publicly-owned forests making up the rest at 43%. Compared with 2024, removals from public forests fell by 6%, while removals from private forests rose by 48% (See Figure 1, Tables 1D, and 1E).

“This was the first year in the time series where removals from private forests were higher than removals from publicly-owned forests. Nearly all of the wood removed in 2025 (99%) came from coniferous trees (See Table 1B).

In 2025, the value of wood taken from forests was €238 million. This was 1% higher than the value of wood in 2024, in contrast to the 18% increase in the volume of wood removed in 2025.

“The highest product share of the wood removed in 2025 was large sawlogs (used in construction) at 36% of the total removals volume, followed by small sawlogs at 28%, and pulpwood at 24% (See Figure 2 and Table 3A). These three categories together accounted for approximately 90% of all wood removed from Irish forests each year."