Real Texas Christmas tree boost economy, generating $397 million in direct contributions
COLLEGE STATION, Texas – More than four million real Christmas trees are sold
annually in Texas, supporting farms and agriculture businesses throughout the
state. As the holiday season nears, Texas A&M Forest Service encourages purchasing
real Christmas trees to help boost the Texas economy.
Texas A&M Forest Service
recently conducted an economic study showing how much value the real Christmas
tree industry adds to the state. In 2022, the industry generated economic
impacts amounting to more than $714 million, including direct, indirect and
induced impacts, while supporting nearly 6,000 jobs. Of $714 million in total
impacts, the Texas Christmas tree industry had a direct economic impact of $397
million, employing 3,896 people with a payroll of more than $97 million.
U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates for 2022 rank the Texas Christmas tree
industry second in the U.S. South based on average annual employment and wages.
“It’s a tradition in many households to
have a real Christmas tree,” said Dr. Aaron Stottlemyer, Texas A&M Forest
Service Forest Analytics Department Head. “The process of going as a family to
pick out a tree is a fun activity that supports rural economies across the
state.”
While many may not think of southern
states as growing many Christmas trees, they are actually grown in all 50
states. The most widely grown Texas Christmas trees are the Virginia pine,
Afghan pine, eastern redcedar shortleaf pine, Arizona cypress and Leyland
cypress.
The first recorded Christmas tree
planting in Texas was in 1935 in Jasper, Texas. Since the 1970s, institutions
such as Texas A&M Forest Service, Texas A&M University and Stephen F.
Austin have worked toward optimizing the health and growth of Christmas tree
species to enhance the State’s Christmas tree industry.
“The Texas Christmas Tree Growers
Association and Texas A&M Forest Service have been collaborating since the
early 1980s,” said Fred Raley, Texas A&M Forest Service Tree Improvement
Coordinator. “The collaboration has worked to develop locally-adapted Virginia pines,
especially hardy and adapted to the Texas climate, to ensure that those that
prefer a live tree can continue to have that Christmas experience for a very
long time.”
In the U.S., the sale of real Christmas
trees has decreased since 2018 and since 2020, the sale of artificial trees has
been higher than real trees. But choosing a real Christmas tree should always
be considered. Not only is cutting
down Christmas trees good for our economy, but it
is also essential for our ecosystem and forest sustainability.
After the holiday season,
real Christmas trees can be repurposed and recycled for many uses. Real Christmas trees can
be used as landscape mulch in yards and gardens as soil erosion prevention,
nest-building materials for birds and natural water habitats for fish and
wildlife in ponds or lakes.
Stottlemyer
explains that the Christmas tree industry is crucial to fulfilling the trees’
lifecycle, expanding trees' potential beyond their natural life and creating
sustainable forests and economies.
“Christmas
tree farms are essentially young forests,” said Stottlemyer. “They are able to
provide us the same benefits as traditional forests by sequestering carbon,
providing a natural habitat for wildlife, cleaning our water and providing
recreational opportunities.”
Real Christmas tree
shoppers can visit Texas Christmas Tree Growers Association website to explore
the different Christmas tree farms in each Texas region.