Plum Creek Timber Company, Inc. has reached an agreement to sell approximately 165,000 acres of Montana and Washington forestland to The Nature Conservancy (TNC) for $134 million. The sale is part of an effort to unite the checkerboard land ownership patterns of these lands. The agreement includes timberlands located at relatively high elevations with slower growing trees.

Timberlands

Plum Creek Timber Company to sell 165,000 acres of forestland in Montana and Washington

Oct 29, 2014. /Lesprom Network/. Plum Creek Timber Company, Inc. has reached an agreement to sell approximately 165,000 acres of Montana and Washington forestland to The Nature Conservancy (TNC) for $134 million, as the company said in the press release received by Lesprom Network.

“Plum Creek has a strong history of conservation and is pleased to partner in the sale of these lands to accommodate the public interest in securing permanent conservation that protects ecological and recreational values,” said Rick Holley, CEO for Plum Creek. “This is an important conservation project that recognizes the highest benefit these lands offer - protecting ecological values and helping to maintain public access. We are pleased that we were able to work with TNC to conserve some of the nation’s most important forest areas,” said Holley.

The property will be acquired by The Nature Conservancy in two phases, the first closing in the 4Q 2014 and the second closing by end of the 1Q 2015. The transaction is subject to various customary closing conditions, including but not limited to the buyer’s due diligence review of the lands to be purchased and approval by each party’s board of directors.

Plum Creek is among the largest and most geographically diverse private landowners in the nation with approximately 6.7 million acres of timberlands in forest ecosystems across the northern and southeastern United States.