Showing posts with label Paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paper. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2009

U.S. manufacturing base needs shot of rejuvenation


U.S. manufacturing base needs shot of rejuvenation
Posted by Doug Dugal:
http://www.postcrescent.com/article/20090111/APC0701/901110518/1436/APC03

Research and innovation made the U.S. the leader in the agricultural industry. Even today we could be called the food basket of the world.

During the industrial revolution, the U.S. again became the leader. But lately, our manufacturing base is eroding due to outsourcing. Keep in mind that outsourced services can be easily brought back to the U.S., but bringing back outsourced manufacturing facilities will be difficult, time-consuming and expensive.

U.S. manufacturing base: Loren Thompson is quoted by Greg Grant in the Dec. 15 issue of Policy that in 1981, manufacturing made up nearly 25 percent of the U.S. economy, compared with 12 percent today. Our merchandise trade deficit doubled to $800 billion and those trends are driven by the erosion of domestic manufacturing. If America loses what's left of its auto industry, or its aerospace industry, or its chemical industry, our superpower status will ebb away.

The long-term implication is that soon the U.S. will no longer build anything. The fact, however, remains that economic growth generated by making world-class products is more sustainable. It is not that other countries are better at manufacturing than we are; they are just better at protecting their manufacturing base.

Paper industry manufacturing base: The mantra that we are the biggest and the best is losing its luster. We must wake up to reality. At one time China was the fifth- or sixth-largest producer of paper and board; now it is the second largest and quickly catching up with the largest producer, the U.S.

In the last 15 to 20 years China has installed more than 30 paper machines, whereas the U.S. has shut down many. Writing and printing papers are already under attack from China. Pretty soon our tissue and towel manufacturing will be under pressure as well; China is now buying high-speed tissue machines. We were a net exporter of paper goods; soon we will be a net importer.

Conclusion: Currently the world business environment is going through a "hiccup."

But, I think, over the long run future growth markets for consumer goods will be India, China, Africa and certain parts of South America because they have huge numbers of "information/goods hungry" consumers. Industrialized nations such as the U.S. and Japan are mature markets and will not have extensive growth unless nifty value-added products are developed through research, development and innovation. We need to revitalize the U.S. manufacturing base to satisfy domestic market, fast. The choice is ours: Either the U.S. can close mills and withdraw or protect manufacturing base and seriously compete.

I think our dependency of essential goods on foreign countries may be a big mistake in the long run. One of the major reasons is that we put economic "sanctions" on certain countries when their actions are against our national security interests. These economic sanctions also include "goods" those countries need but do not produce. So if our manufacturing base is compromised, guess who is going to put sanctions on whom? Just a thought. Wise up.

Free-trade agreements must have the same playing fields for all traders. Granted, in the global economy goods will be produced where they are made best; but why can't that manufacturer be the United States?

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Monday, December 29, 2008

Prices dropping for all grades of paper


Prices dropping for all grades of paper
Posted by D. Eadward Tree
http://deadtreeedition.blogspot.com/2008/12/prices-dropping-for-all-grades-of-paper.html

Deflation has now officially hit the market for publication papers: Prices for everything from newsprint to coated freesheet have declined this month, several sources indicated in the past week.

December prices were down even in the formerly rock-steady market for high-grade supercalendered paper (SCA) paper, according to both Pulp & Paper Week and Deutsche Bank. Mark Wilde of Deutsche Bank put the December drop at $10 to $20 per ton and said SCA prices could continue declining if demand for lightweight coated (LWC) remains weak. Until recently, analysts were predicting that SCA prices would remain steady or even rise during 2009.

"Newsprint prices are slipping," Wilde wrote, with declining costs and the Canadian dollar making mills more willing to accept lower prices rather than shutting down. The Deutsche Bank analyst agreed with Pulp & Paper Week that newsprint dropped about $10 to $15 per metric ton in December, breaking a string of consecutive monthly price increases that had pushed newsprint prices up more than $200, or about 35%, since the summer of 2007.

FOEX reported a slight drop in U.S. newsprint prices last week, while Forestweb reported that newsprint prices are flat. But Forestweb's North American Publishing Papers Index decreased in December because of declining prices for coated papers.

Prices for LWC and other coated-groundwood products dropped $35 to $70 per ton in December and are "coming under increased pressure, wrote Wilde. "With consumption likely to remain weak and the US$ rising (increasing threat from imports), producers will remain at battle stations through 2009," he added. High customer inventories, decreasing catalog circulation, and a weak advertising market for magazines are all dragging down coated groundwood.

The CEO of Abitibi Bowater (aka AbitibiUnderwater) admitted to the Globe and Mail this week that his biggest fear was a collapse of demand in the first half of next year. Despite the bearish news on pricing, shares of the newsprint giant doubled in price during the week (to 52 cents, down from $20.47 at the beginning of the year). AbitibiBowater stock was boosted by news of an apparent sale of some hydroelectric assets, production cuts by competitors, and the company's statement that the current quarter will be more profitable than the previous quarter. All of that boosted hopes that the company will remain solvent despite having $1 billion in debt payments due during the coming year.

Stocks of such other publicly traded paper companies as Verso, Domtar, and Catalyst were generally flat for the week. Wall Street had already accepted that demand and prices will decline. The big question is whether producers will idle enough capacity to prevent paper markets from collapsing.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Paper war breaks out as White Birch undercuts Abitibi


Paper war breaks out as White Birch undercuts Abitibi's price discipline
By Andrew Ragsly
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/25d563fa-cb97-11dd-ba02-000077b07658,dwp_uuid=e8477cc4-c820-11db-b0dc-000b5df10621.html

White Birch Paper broke ranks with other newsprint manufacturers this month by slashing prices to capture market share amid dwindling demand, industry sources and two buysiders told Debtwire.

Privately held White Birch is the second largest producer of newsprint in North America with 18% of total market share. The company is flouting attempts by industry leader AbitibiBowater to enforce price discipline by lowering its going contract rate. Abitibi wants to protect pricing in the face of persistent order declines from ailing newspaper publishers, said the sources.

Specifically White Birch cut a deal with Gannett Company this month to supply newsprint through 2009 well-below November's industry-average price point of USD 770 per ton, said two of the industry sources and one of the buysiders. While at a lower price point, the deal is rumoured to boost the volumes White Birch will supply to Gannett year-over-year, one of the sources said.

The pricing war is hitting AbitibiBowater at a particularly inopportune moment. The company faces USD 919m of maturities over the next year, including a USD 347m Libor+ 800bps term loan due 30 March. Management needs to impress lenders with a bullish cash flow story if it hopes to refinance those obligations, said the buysiders.
Spokespersons for White Birch, AbitibiBowater and Gannett declined to comment.

Abitibi's USD 347m Libor+ 800bps term loan was bid at 75 today, down from 82 on 2 December, according to Markit. Bowater's USD 250m 9% traded at 27 on 3 December, down from 45 on 19 November, according to TRACE. White Birch's USD 100m Libor+ 480bps second-lien term loan was bid at 15 today, down from 33 on 10 November. The company's USD 475m Libor+ 275bps first-lien term loan was bid at 48.25 today, down from 59.12 on 24 November, according to Markit.

"AbitibiBowater, as the number one market share player [with 41%], was always going to hold onto prices as long as they could," said one of the industry sources. "It's finally starting to show up now that smaller players are breaking ranks, but White Birch and other companies had been making their undercutting moves since back around September."

AbitibiBowater bowed to pressure from White Birch last week when it rescinded a USD 20 per-ton price increase, according to three of the industry sources. The Canadian-US behemoth also announced last week the removal of 830,000 tons of newsprint capacity.
West Coast paper producers Catalyst Paper (7.8% market share) and Norpac (5%), have already been pricing at a discount to the AbitibiBowater-dominated East Coast market for the better part of a year. West Coast newsprint prices tracked near USD 700 per ton in November, said the sources. An official from Norpac declined to comment, and Catalyst Paper did not return calls.

The pricing conflict is also spreading into the coated free sheet paper market as Gannett is rumoured to have negotiated a USD 1,060 per ton contract with NewPage, down from November's USD 1,100 per ton price point, said one of the buysiders. A spokesperson for NewPage would not comment on specific contracts with its customers, but maintained the company is "holding price just fine".
Similar to newsprint, the coated paper sector has been under pressure to take out capacity in order to offset demand declines and boost pricing. Coated free sheet and newsprint consumption were both down roughly 15% year-to-date, according to a sellside analyst.
NewPage's USD 800m 10% second-lien notes due 2012 were bid at 40.5 on 5 December, down from 56.5 on 24 November, according to TRACE

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Engineers See Major Paper Mill Savings With New Rotor Technology


No Pulp Fiction: Engineers See Major Paper Mill Savings With New Rotor Technology
By Brian Lin with files from Erinrose Handy

A partnership between UBC, government and the pulp and paper industry has resulted in the development of three high efficiency pulp screen rotors that produce high quality paper while reducing almost half the energy required.

“There are currently 300 pulp screens in British Columbia’s 20 pulp and paper mills,” says UBC Mechanical Engineering Assoc. Prof. James Olson. “The industry consumes almost 20 per cent of all the electricity produced in the province and pulp screening is an energy intensive operation in that process.”

Pulp screens work somewhat like the spin cycle in a household washing machine by rotating at high speeds and forcing pulp through narrow openings in the screen. Pulp screens in B.C. alone consume 300 Gigawatt Hours per year at an estimated cost of $16 million -- or enough energy to light up 15,000 homes.

Olson and fellow UBC engineers Carl Ollivier-Gooch and Mark Martinez, along with industrial partners at Montreal-based Advanced Fiber Technologies Inc., took inspiration from aerospace technology and designed a family of uniquely shaped, hydrodynamic rotors that significantly reduce drag and operate at much lower speeds and power, while increasing the capacity and efficiency of the screen.

The technology was patented and licensed to Advanced Fiber Technologies and 100 new rotors were installed in 30 mills across Canada.

“The trial results were beyond everyone’s expectations -- reducing electricity consumption by 52 per cent compared to current state-of-the-art rotors,” says Olson. “If all pulp screens used in B.C. mills were converted to the new rotor technology, an estimated $8 million could be saved each year. Adopted nation-wide, the industry could save $20 million a year.”

While the cost savings would increase the industry’s competitiveness against new paper producers such as China, the reduced energy usage also translates into lower greenhouse emissions. The new technology could also cement Canada’s leadership in pulp equipment manufacturing and further diversify a sector that currently logs $53 billion in sales and $44 billion in exports per year.

As a result of the success in the mill trials, the research team has won BC Hydro’s New Technology of the Year Award (2007), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)’s Synergy Award for Partnership and Innovation (2007), and the British Columbia Innovations Council’s Lieutenant Governor’s Award (2008).

The work has also led to a $2.2 million investment from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and a partnership with 11 industry partners including BC Hydro and most of the paper mills in B.C.

“There’s a gap between electricity supply and demand in B.C. and we need to do more to conserve power,” says Lisa Coltart, BC Hydro’s director of Power Smart. “We’re excited to contribute to research that will provide substantial energy savings while making the province a world leader in the field.”

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Review: Paper Trails


Review: Paper Trails
by Mandy Haggith
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2008/08/23/bohag123.xml

Mary Wakefield discovers the true cost of paper
It's unusual to come across a book that manages to be both very boring and very interesting at the same time. It happens sometimes with people - old relatives, for instance, and their meticulous recollections of doodlebugs and powdered egg - but only rarely with books.

So Paper Trails, one woman's mission to uncover the evils of the global paper industry, contains an extra unintentional conundrum: is it fascinating or dead.

Is it amazing that an average Brit uses over 440lbs of paper a year? That the world consumes just under a million tons a day, which if it were laid out in A4 sheets would wrap around the equator 1,500 times? That a third of all forms become out of date before they're distributed? Or is it tedious? I'm in two minds.

Perhaps this curious boring/exciting thing is a quality inherent in paper itself. After all, paper can be some of the dullest stuff on earth: the crumpled trouble-makers found inside jammed copiers, graph paper, cash-machine receipts, junk mail.

Or it can be terrifically exciting. Nothing since has ever compared to the teen allure of hunky-dory paper: thick, ridged, purple, yellow, red, ready for writing on in silver pen. Then there's greaseproof paper, that harbinger of deliciousness, and clever little Rizlas, and brown paper packages tied up with string.

And oddly, Mandy Haggith, the author, is herself subject to the same boring/interesting schizophrenia.

She says in chapter one that she once made a big pile of all the paper a person uses in a year, and exhibited it in her local town hall so that her pals could repent of their wasteful ways. How dull is that?

"It made my neighbours gasp," says Mandy. I suspect they were yawning. Then she confesses to a "weakness" for hand-made paper. Hand-made paper is loathsome. No one writes jokes on hand-made paper and sometimes there are flowers pressed into its fibres. Why not spiders? Much better. More appealing to kids.

On the upside, Haggith's journey has the comic nobility of a heartfelt crusade.

Paper Trails documents her paper-chase round the world, following her subject from birth to death: from logging (often illegal) through to pulping, paper-making, paper-wasting, paper-recycling; tree-huggers chasing tree muggers.

And it's not all stats and lectures; there are touching passages whenever Mandy meets up with a handsome barefoot environmentalists and her prose blossoms: "The broadleaf trees were in full autumn colours, vine leaves shouting red up aspen trunks crowned with fluttering gold coinage."

The paper industry also turns out to be full of fabulous baddies, straight from the pages of a Carl Hiaasen novel.

In Indonesia, Mandy meets nasty loggers, all smokers and scowlers who employ bouncers trained by US marines to warn our girl detective off. They flout regulations, make off with irreplaceable trees, and plant in their stead the alien acacia which sucks the water from the land and poisons the soil.

In Russia Mandy tackles the aluminium tycoon Oleg Deripaska, who owns a paper mill on the edge of beautiful lake Baikal. Baikal contains 20 per cent of the world's liquid drinking water (see, that's interesting, isn't it?) but the plant has been accused of polluting it, which is very aggravating for the Nerpa, the world's only earless, fresh-water seals.

Still, on the plus side, Haggith has a very satisfying pop at Vanity Fair. "Their Green Issue was full of puff-pieces on the environmental credentials of American celebrities, yet not even printed on recycled paper".

The paper industry is accused of buying up ancient trees, home to monkeys and moths, and turning them into pulp on pub toilet floors. Isn't the 21st century great?

But then just when you're ready to join Mandy's gang and to ignore all the brain-numbing passages of eco-bore, she'll introduce you to one of her friends: "In an era of increasing competition and growing concern about corporate responsibility," says Ginger Cassidy from ForestEthics, "companies must demonstrate their values and protect their brand by implementing better environmental policies."

Now that's a real waste of paper.
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Norske Skog sees newsprint price hikes
By Camilla Knudsen and John Acher
http://www.reuters.com/article/Paper08/idUSLL26832820080822

OSLO/HELSINKI (Reuters) - Norwegian papermaker Norske Skog (NSG.OL: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) sees European newsprint prices increasing in 2009 by more than rising costs, giving some margin improvement, the company's chief executive said on Wednesday.

The paper industry has struggled to climb out of a six-year slump, dogged by overcapacity, soft demand and prices and rising costs of raw material and energy which have kept earnings poor. European producers have also suffered from a weak dollar that has put them at a disadvantage to North American rivals.

Newsprint, the paper newspapers are printed on, has been one of the hardest hit segments, partly because of the shift over the last decade to electronic publishing from print media.

Norske Skog sees a tighter balance in the European newsprint market due partly to capacity closures, but also aided by price increases in North America and steep price rises in Asia, Chief Executive Christian Rynning-Toennesen said.

"We believe in price increases in European newsprint next year," Rynning-Toennesen told the Reuters Paper Summit, calling it "highly likely." Newsprint prices are set in annual negotiations with customers, talks that will begin this autumn.

He declined to say by how much he expected prices to rise but said: "There's an unusually strong combination of price increases in the other major markets in the world plus a tightening of the market balance in Europe."

Norske Skog is the world's No. 2 newsprint producer. Other producers agreed that newsprint prices are headed up in Europe.

BIG PRICE HIKES

"We are speaking of a substantial price increase," Swedish papermaker Holmen Chief Executive Magnus Hall told the summit.

Costs are rising, though there has been some easing off in the rise in energy prices and recovered paper prices have flattened out, Rynning-Toennesen said. "I still expect cost pressure throughout the rest of this year," he said.

"In European newsprint, it is likely that we will see price increases bigger than cost increases so that there is some margin improvement," Rynning-Toennesen said.

Magazine paper prices are up and can go further, he said.

Norske Skog has implemented 5 to 7 percent price rises from the second quarter into the third quarter on new contracts, he said. "And we still think there is room to increase prices of magazine paper further from where they are now," he said.

The demand picture in newsprint remains soft in the mature markets of Europe and North America.

"It's already quite obvious that the price increases we see in the United States are because of the (capacity) closures that have been done there because the market for newsprint in the U.S. is declining," he said.

Newsprint demand in Europe is down by 2 percent in the year to date from the same period last year, he said.

"In the U.S. it is obviously continuing down -- it was 8 percent down in the last 8 months in the last 12 months -- whereas we still see very solid growth in Asia outside of Japan, which means particularly high growth in China and India."

"We believe in a slowly downward trend in European newsprint consumption, a steeper decline in U.S. consumption also for the rest of the year, and continued good growth in Asia and South America," he said.

(Reporting by Terje Solsvik, Camilla Knudsen, Sakari Suoninen and John Acher; Editing by David Cowell)

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Weathering a Stormy Paper Market Forecast


Weathering a Stormy Paper Market Forecast
By Alex Brown
http://www.pubexec.com/story/story.bsp?sid=92793&var=story
What's behind the market's drastic changes, what to expect next, and how you can deal with higher prices and tight supply.

There's no sugarcoating it:
The paper market is bleak for buyers. The problems lie in both price and availability, and the forecast for 2008 has almost no bright spots. So, several questions have emerged: How did we get here? What can you do to cope with this new reality? What trends may affect paper purchasing this year and beyond?

First, it's easy to be puzzled by how the paper market changed so abruptly and intensely. Paper buyers have seen the dark clouds massing over the mills for years, but little has come of it. Why is it actually raining now?

In the last five years, we've seen several mill closures. Tembec and UPM closed mills, and other mills shut down individual machines. The net effect was a drop of at least 20 percent of North American coated-paper capacity. As the first of these closures occurred, paper availability might have tightened a bit, but there always seemed to be another ready source of supply.

Now the industry has finally carried its capacity reduction to a point that supply is constrained both here and in Europe. It moved in what looked like baby steps, but, in the end, a real distance was crossed. Depending on the specific stock, demand is now very close to or in excess of supply.


Let us consider the paper industry's perspective for a moment. If you've watched the market through several cycles, you've probably noticed that the mills seem to have forgotten a little section of "Economics 101"-namely, commodities prices can rise when demand exceeds supply. So why, you might have wondered, didn't mills limit capacity sooner?

We'll leave out some of the variables, but there are two key reasons why shutting down machines hasn't been a shortcut to profitability. First, the enormous capital costs of papermaking mean mills become profitable only when capacity utilization is extremely high. Roughly speaking, a mill might start turning a profit when it's producing about 95 percent or more of all the paper it could possibly make. Notice the limited upside, as well as the long, brutal road to profitability. The gap between losing money and making money is very, very narrow.

The second reason mills tend not to adjust capacity tightly to demand is that there are two levels of competition for the U.S.-paper dollar. Domestic mills battle each other, and then they balance foreign paper sources with all the extra complications of currency exchange.

For the last several decades, whenever demand edged sharply above U.S. capacity, European and Canadian mills were a handy safety valve. Asian and South American sources have also entered the mix. For much of this time, the dollar's currency strength has made exporters keen to court the large market in this country.

However, we've all but lost this safety valve against supply/demand tension now that the exchange rate with both the euro and the Canadian dollar is so poor. A Finnish mill would very much prefer to sell paper to Germans, in euros, than to Americans.

Then again, what exactly is a "Finnish mill" these days? The paper industry is consolidating into international entities. But that doesn't provide any relief under our current conditions. In fact, the consolidation is not merely a compression of sources, but a new style of ownership.

Five paper companies-NewPage (which has acquired Stora Enso North America), Verso, Catalyst, Pine Bluff and West Linn-are now owned by private-equity concerns. Add up the volume these mills represent, and you'll find that private equity controls 62 percent of the coated groundwood market in North America, and 57 percent of the coated freesheet.

These companies play by new management rules. They want return on investment, they want it promptly, and, presumably, they want to sell the underlying assets as soon as they're sufficiently buffed up to make the sale worthwhile.

To some degree, even paper buyers could benefit from the new management style. Perhaps an industry that's struggled for so long to scratch toward decent margins can and should be shaken up. But it's fair to say that the new trends in management, which may spill over to other, publicly traded mills, are not designed to ease the buyer's sufferings. If a price increase can be supported, a price increase will be made.

So that's how we got here: reduced supply, the falling dollar and private-equity ownership. These conditions justified price increases, and mills have shown the fortitude to demand them.

Are the mills happy yet? Not really. Despite the 2007 round of price hikes, increases in the direct costs of papermaking have munched up much of the revenue. Fuel oil, which affects both papermaking and shipping, is the main villain, but raw materials' prices have also been increasing. In short, if the market can support further price increases, they're on the way. Look for bumps in April and, perhaps, July.

What's the Buyer To Do?
The paper buyer is left without many tactics. In broad terms, the only force that can mitigate the current paper price increases is a drop in demand still greater than the so-so to negative growth we've been seeing in the magazine and catalog markets. So, this is good news/bad news time: If your pages and counts drop still more, maybe the mills will ease off, but then your pages and counts will have dropped. If you're growing or holding your own, it may be difficult to get paper, but you'll be growing. If a lot of us are growing, prices are going to keep rising.

Let's break out the emergency flotation devices, then. To fight the impact of price increases, you can reduce basis weight, trim size, paper grade or, of course, pages and copies.

Cutting basis weight will work just fine, provided your new weight is available. Because we're struggling with both price increases and supply shortages, check the practicality of your new spec before announcing to the publisher that changing from 38 pound to 35 pound saves 8 percent. Be sure that the mill makes the weight you want, as plenty of them have basis-weight preferences.

A trim-size cut means the art staff and ad-traffic team must update templates and revise the specs in media kits. There's some work and cost to be considered right there, and it's only worth spending if you have your printer's cooperation. Switching to short cutoff presses, for example, only works if there is capacity. Publications that use a wide, 9-inch luxury format can make the change by ordering a new roll width, but if that distinctive trim size is key to audience and advertiser appeal, consider this carefully.

Changing paper grade can save a great deal, as long as it doesn't require throwing the baby out with the bath water by harming your publication's stature. If you're already on a #5 grade, the next train leaving the station is supercalendared stock. This paper performs quite differently, and you'll need your printer's commitment to make it work. Brace yourself for an increase in ink costs, as the more porous surface absorbs more. Finally, any grade change may cause you supply problems when adjusting your allocation.

Despite the caveats, all three of these adjustments can be smart techniques for controlling costs today. Make sure they suit your product and your audience, and get your printer and paper supplier to help carry them to fruition.

The other key concern is guarding your ongoing paper supply. It's safe to say that mills have taken on a go-ahead-make-my-day demeanor-if you fight too hard for better prices and terms, the mill doesn't mind an excuse to cut your allocation. Tread cautiously.

As business practices become increasingly hard-nosed, it's almost quaint to imagine that business relationships still matter. Private-equity owners are ready to be just as cutthroat as you are, so good, old relationships don't count for as much as they used to. But with the magnitude of supply cuts now and in the immediate future, a good connection with a mill or broker is one of the few shelters in this storm. You might even want to pick up the tab for lunch.

Looking Ahead
The dollar is almost certainly going to continue its swoon, so don't look for much help from Europe. Asia, however, appears to be another matter. The currency problem is just as nasty against the yuan, but China and Indonesia have shown a strong interest in cracking our mighty market.
Will shipping Chinese paper across an ocean and half a continent fix things? Not so fast. The price of pulp is higher in Asia, where fiber sources include imported pulp. Asian mills began introducing their wares at startlingly low prices, but have steadily edged upward and no longer look like a bargain. The currency exchange problem and the threat of a future tariff all suggest that Asian papers will not radically alter our paper landscape.

Our ace in the hole, it's sad to say, is a continued drop in demand that forces mills to choose between cutting still more capacity and selling at prices more favorable to buyers. Needless to say, a drop in demand comes along with lots of other depressing baggage, including the sight of publishers falling by the wayside. But those who remain strong may be able to reap benefits. In other words, the publishing market may experience its own shakeout, courtesy of rising paper prices-and let's not forget the hike in distribution costs that completes the one-two punch.

The major question is not how much mills may raise prices, but how gradually. If private-equity thinking leads the way, we may see a steep curve upward, sharp enough to kick some buyers out of the market, or constrain growth. The resulting drop in demand could kick right back at the mills. If mills take it slowly, they might end up with both profits and customers.

Prepare for more increases this year, inventory your specifications to see if you can change what you buy, and pay attention to your supplier relationships to keep the paper flowing. These are challenging times, but smart paper buyers will survive them.

Alex Brown is a consultant to magazine publishers specializing in manufacturing and magazine management. She founded her consulting company, Printmark, in 1984, and is a frequent speaker at industry events.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Paper products industry to lose $400M this year


Paper products industry to lose $400M this year, turnaround to start in 2008
3 hours ago

OTTAWA - Canada's paper products industry will be in the red again this year, recording about $400 million in losses as a result of the surging loonie and falling demand, the Conference Board of Canada says.

That would mark the third straight year of losses in the $11-billion pulp and paper industry, which has been in a deep funk for most of the decade.

But the Conference Board report released Thursday forecasts a turnaround for the industry starting in 2008 as prices begin to rebound modestly and demand increases from such expanding economies as China.

The report predicts the industry will make a modest $6 million profit in 2008, but earnings will rise to $600 million in 2009 and continue building to $1.7 billion in 2011.

"Much of the industry's profit will be generated by the pulp segment, boosted by strong demand in China and Western Europe," the report states.

Despite the brightening prospects, the board does not see the same bright picture for employment.

The industry has shed about 21,000 jobs in the last four years. But despite expected increasing profits, the board forecasts only minimal job growth starting in 2008.

The key factor ailing the industry is the high loonie - the board estimates that every cent rise in the Canadian dollar has shaved $200 million in profits from the sector's bottom line.

As well, the increasing computerization and Internet use in North America has cut into the demand for certain types of paper, the report says.

"The death of paper has been forecast many times since the 1990s," the report notes.

"Yet the industry - especially in North America - has still been hit by the rise of computers and the Internet," it adds. "Newsprint has been worst hit as circulation and classified advertising continue to decline and as environmental concerns multiply."

The Pulp and Paper Products Council pegged newsprint consumption decline at 12.2 per cent in the first three quarters of 2007.

In the wake of increased competition and mounting losses, many companies have either merged their operations, shut down money-losing mills or made other streamlining moves to remain profitable.

For example, Montreal-based paper giants Domtar and Abitibi have struck deals to merge with major U.S. forestry companies and are moving forward with efficiency drives to improve their finances.

Domtar Corp. (TSX:UFS), formed by the merger of Domtar Inc. and the fine-paper business of U.S. forestry giant Weyerhaeuser Co. (NYSE:WY), is the largest integrated producer of uncoated freesheet paper in North America and the second-largest in the world based on production capacity, and is also a manufacturer of paper-grade pulp.

The company, with nearly 14,000 people, also produces lumber and other specialty and industrial wood products.

Meanwhile, AbitibiBowater Inc. (TSX:ABH) is launching a review of operations as the newly combined company attempts to improve operations and reduce debt by $1 billion over three years. The review could lead to mill shutdowns in Canada and the United States.

The combination of Abitibi-Consolidated Inc. of Montreal and Bowater Inc. of South Carolina was completed Oct. 29.

Earlier this week, Vancouver-based Catalyst Paper Corp. (TSX:CTL) extended the shutdown of its No. 1 paper machine at the Elk Falls newsprint mill at Campbell River, B.C. until the end of March because of a shortage of fibre.

Other pulp and cardboard operations at the mill will also be shut down over Christmas, affecting 600 employees.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Reading into the pulp mill fictions

Reading into the pulp mill fictions
Judith Ajani
http://canberra.yourguide.com.au/detail.asp?class=your+say&subclass=general&story_id=1053684&category=opinion

The silent sleeper in the Gunns pulp mill debate is its commercial viability. Perhaps Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull, with his business blood, cannot imagine a company advancing a $1.5billion investment without having done its sums, carefully. Turnbull is not alone here, most people would think it incredible.
But Gunns is no ordinary company. It has never experienced a conflict-free business day since its mid-1980s beginnings. Its business battles are as much battles against greens as they are for market share.

Gunns is a company lifted by a cheer squad rooted in four decades of battles over hydro-electric dams, mining, woodchipping and pulp mills in an island state of just 500,000 people. While its cheer squad bears little commercial responsibility for Tasmania's largest-ever investment, financial prudence requires that Gunns' board somehow keeps its feet firmly on the ground.

Gunns is reserving its final judgment on the viability of the mill until the approvals are in. But because the environmental and political debate precedes the economic judgment, the mill's commercial viability has slipped under the radar. It is quite possible it will fail the test.

In Tasmania, a grudge factor has simmered since the late 1980s when Canadian paper maker Noranda pulled out of the Wesley Vale joint venture pulp mill proposal with North Broken Hill. The public understood the pull-out as industry's response to then federal environment minister Graham Richardson's tightened requirements. This was just half the story.

Since Noranda's decision, globally traded chemical pulp prices have halved in real terms, a scenario they had not planned for and an economic reality of little interest to grudge-bearers. In the shadow of Wesley Vale, Gunns' proposed pulp mill is so emotional and politically complex that neither Turnbull nor his shadow, Peter Garrett, should assume economic rationalism drives the show.

Despite the mill's commercial viability remaining untested publicly, both Gunns and the Tasmanian Government promote its wider economic benefits. If the pulp mill's financials do not stack-up, neither does the $6.7billion boost to Tasmania's economy and the 1617 new jobs calculated by the Allen Consulting Group as input to Gunns' integrated impact statement.

Allens did not investigate the financial viability of the mill before calculating these figures. The study's project director later argued that "it is difficult to see why this [the mill's commercial viability] is anything other than a matter for Gunns and the company financiers" and questioned the legitimacy of government or the public interest in the commercial viability of major industrial projects. Allens, however, ignores the Tasmanian public's business interest through Forestry Tasmania who will supply most of the wood from public native forests.

It also ignores the risk of more Federal Government hand-outs if Tasmania's public purse is used to keep an uneconomic mill alive. ITS Global, the consultants engaged by the Tasmanian Government to review the social and economic benefits of the pulp mill, also started with the premise of the mill's commercial viability.

CommSec, using information Gunns presented in its impact statement and its own market analysis, concluded the mill would be marginally positive for Gunns but emphasised the project was highly risky, strongly leveraged to a volatile commodity price and subject to approval and construction risk. Its analysis was hamstrung by data constraints, especially on native forest log prices that remain confidential to Gunns and the Tasmanian Government. Other broker reports agree with CommSec's risk assessment but give a more positive assessment of the mill.

Five years ago, Visy Industries broke through the pulp mill barrier in Australia when it commissioned its softwood plantation mill near Tumut. Environmentalists gave it a tick having passed the first hurdle no native forest logging and the second concerning emissions. Visy also engaged in real public consultation. On environmental and consultation matters, the two pulp mills are fundamentally different. They also differ in their market orientation, and herein lies the high economic risk CommSec associated with the Gunns mill.

Visy processes softwood pulp into paper to supply its domestic box-making plants. It enjoys the transport and familiarity advantages of a domestic market. Visy's strategy copies the global corporate structure of integrated pulp and paper production. Gunns can't follow suit, as its hardwood pulp is geared for printing and writing paper. This is because PaperlinX, Australia's monopoly producer of such paper, has the domestic market effectively stitched up through its own production or its subsidiaries' imports. Gunns must therefore compete in the global pulp market, a market that's both a dumping ground in economic downturns for old players and the target of new, extraordinarily low-cost producers in South America. CommSec believes Gunns cannot match their costs.

For many decades now, real (inflation-adjusted) pulp prices have followed a roller coaster down in this gruesome market. Gunns' forceful lobbying to keep costs down is no surprise. The problem lies in the Tasmanian Government who leads the cheer squad.

Under intense political pressure, Turnbull brings in scientists to help fix the growing political problem. An economic evaluation would be equally valuable. It would help shape how the Federal Government might best bring Australia's native forest pulp mill saga to a close. For Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd, this task includes managing the forestry union and Labor politicians who will not forget Wesley Vale days.

Judith Ajani is an economist at the Australian National University and author of the recently published The Forest Wars, by Melbourne University Publishing, 368pp, $34.95.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Shutdown feared at Catalyst Paper

Shutdown feared at Catalyst Paper
by Gordon Hamilton
Vancouver Sun
Published: Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Catalyst Paper has called a meeting today with union leaders from its four pulp and paper operations in what is widely believed to be an announcement that it intends to shut down capacity.

"I would say things are not looking too bright at Catalyst," said investment analyst Paul Quinn of Salman Partners. "It's really difficult right now for Canadian producers with the Canadian dollar where it is and fibre costs going up.

"I wouldn't rule out temporarily shutting down some capacity."


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Font: ****Catalyst has mills at Port Alberni, Powell River, Crofton and Campbell River. It could close one entire mill or several machines at a number of mills. The company lost $25 million in the first quarter of 2007.

Catalyst is the coastal region's prinicipal pulp and paper company, with 3,800 employees. Besides the four paper mills, it runs the province's only plant producing recycled paper.

The meeting with union leaders comes after Catalyst's board of directors met Tuesday in Vancouver. Representatives of the company's largest shareholder, Third Avenue Management of New York, were on hand for the meeting.

Catalyst is being squeezed by poor paper markets and because its operating costs are all in Canadian dollars. But the majority of Catalyst's business is conducted in export markets, so its transactions are for the most part completed in US dollars. As the Canadian dollar climbs versus the greenback, the company's revenue stream is less able to cover its operating costs.

The Canadian dollar closed above 93 cents US on Tuesday.

The last time Catalyst temporarily shut down capacity was in early 2005 when one paper line was closed at Port Alberni. That shutdown lasted for almost two years before the company declared it permanent.

Port Alberni Mayor Ken McRae was prepared for the worst Tuesday, saying he expects the company will announce it is closing further capacity there. Catalyst's Port Alberni mill produces lightweight coated paper and directory paper. Lightweight coated prices are weak and the directory machine has high operating costs.

"We have been hearing so many stories -- that the mill has been sold to someone else, that they are going to shut down another machine. You never know. The machines are old, eh?" said McRae.

"Whatever they do, they will do. And we will just move on."

ghamilton@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2007

Friday, May 11, 2007

Cascades withstands perfect storm of price increase and low fibre generation

Cascades withstands perfect storm of price increase and low fibre generation
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/business/070510/b0510103A.html

MONTREAL (CP) - Packaging company Cascades Inc. (TSX:CAS) recorded a first quarter profit after surviving a "perfect storm" that saw Asian demand dramatically boost recycled fibre costs in light of a seasonal North American slowdown in material generation.

The price of recycled fibre, which represents 75 per cent of Cascades' fibre input, more than doubled after Christmas to US$150 a tonne. It has now settled at US$90.

"Old recycled fibre, whether it be corrugated cardboard or office paper, all categories skyrocketed," president and CEO Alain Lemaire told a news conference Thursday following the company's annual meeting.

The change cost Cascades $33 million in the quarter. Yet it earned $22 million, or 22 cents a share for the period ended March 31, thanks to special items such as proceeds from the sale of a U.S. boxboard plant.

That compared with seven cents a share when it made $6 million a year earlier.

Excluding one-time items, Cascades earned $5 million in the quarter, down $1 million from 2006. The five-cent earnings were below market expectations.

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The impact of the fibre cost increase was severe because the world's ninth largest user of recycled paper consumes 2.5 million tonnes of the waste per year.

Asian demand, particularly from China, surged when producers looked to build inventory before starting up large new mills.

Analyst Pierre Lacroix of Desjardins Securities called the confluence of Asian demand and weaker North American generation a perfect storm that will weaken in the coming months.

"The results in the first quarter were impacted by one-time items or temporary factors such as waste paper price surge," he said in an interview.

"At the same time product prices are going up in boxboard, container board and tissue, so the end products are healthy, prices are rising and you have a softening of the cost pressure."

Cascades' diversified portfolio should help it confront the pulp and paper industry's ongoing challenges of weaker demand, Lemaire said.

"We are lucky to be in different sectors that will be more equal," he told reporters.

Looking ahead, Lemaire said he expects continued challenges as the company moves ahead this year, but it will focus on growing its business and keeping costs under control.

"We intend to evaluate our assets and remain on the lookout for acquisitions that allow us to reinforce our position in our best sectors," he told shareholders.

"We clearly demonstrated in 2006 that we could adapt and excel in difficult business conditions and we will continue to do so."

Cascades said it had one-time gains in the quarter, notably a $25-million gain before taxes on the January sale of its 40 per cent interest in GSD Packaging to Rock-Tenn Co. for US$32 million.

The company also benefited from its move to acquire the other half of its former joint-venture unit Norampac, Canada's largest cardboard producer, from Domtar (TSX:DTC).

But it was also hit by a boiler failure that shut down production at its coated recycled boxboard mill in Toronto.

Quarterly revenues jumped to just over $1 billion for the first time, from $818 million.

Cascades' drive to be an industry leader on the environmental front was marked last quarter by the launch of a degradable polystyrene foam tray. Popular Quebec restaurant chain St. Hubert has become among its first customers for takeout containers.

Lemaire said the company continues to prove that pushing sustainable development can also be profitable.

"If some companies rush to adopt responsible behaviour, Cascades can boast to them that it has been green for more than 40 years," he told shareholders.

Founded in 1964, Cascades produces packaging and tissue products composed mainly of recycled fibres. The company employs nearly 14.000 people at 100 mills and production centres in North America and Europe.

The board of directors declared a four-cent quarterly dividend to be paid June 14.

On the Toronto Stock Exchange, Cascades shares gained 26 cents to $11.97 in Thursday trading.

© The Canadian Press, 2007

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

NewPage reports $20M 1Q loss

NewPage reports $20M 1Q loss
Dayton Business Journal - 10:13 AM EDT Monday, May 7, 2007
Paper company NewPage Corp. posted a $20 million loss in the first quarter on lower sales.

Sales were down 6 percent to $476 million from $507 million in first quarter 2006, the company reported Monday.

The loss, however, was narrower than the $60 million loss in the same quarter last year.

Volume and price were down as the company continued to see negative effects of imports of coated paper from China, Indonesia and South Korea, said Mark Suwyn, chief executive officer and chairman.

The Dayton company filed petitions with the U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. International Trade Commission last year seeking antidumping and countervailing taxes on coated paper imports from the three countries. Countervailing taxes help restrict international trade where imports are subsidized by a foreign country and hurt domestic producers. Dumping happens when a country exports a significant amount of goods at prices much lower than in the domestic market.

The commerce department imposed preliminary countervailing taxes on the countries in March. An answer on the dumping cases is expected this month.

"We are willing to compete with anyone in the world as long as we have a level playing field," Suwyn said.

NewPage has been planning an initial public offering since 2006 but has yet to go public. The company has about 4,300 employees, including 250 at its Dayton headquarters. The company produces coated paper at plants in Michigan, Maryland, Maine and Kentucky.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Tumut pulp mill expansion gets planning green light

Tumut pulp mill expansion gets planning green light
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200705/s1913138.htm

Planning approval has been given for the $450 million expansion of a pulp and paper mill at Tumut, in southern New South Wales, but there is still doubt about the project because local roads will need to be upgraded.

Visy plans to more than double the capacity of its mill is expected to create 900 jobs, 400 of them ongoing.

But a company spokesman, Tony Gray, says $24 million is needed to bring local roads up to scratch.

"The issue of roads and transport management is definitely one of the major stumbling blocks to definitely proceeding with the mill," he said.

"We have already put a lot of work into the traffic plan and we'll be attempting to minimise the number of truck movements wherever possible."

Tumut Mayor Gene Vanzella says he is also concerned about roads.

He says the expansion will put a lot of pressure on local resources.

"Last time when they built the stage one, accommodation was booked out as far as Wagga. There was buses coming in with guys from Wagga, Gundagai, Adelong, Batlow, Tumbarumba - even Talbingo was heavily booked," he said.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Ahead of the Bell: MeadWestvaco

Ahead of the Bell: MeadWestvaco
http://news.moneycentral.msn.com/printarticle.aspx?feed=AP&date=20070430&id=6813627

NEW YORK (AP) - Packaging company MeadWestvaco Corp. holds a meeting for shareholders on Monday, ahead of first-quarter results on Wednesday.

Analysts expect MeadWestvaco to report earnings 3 cents per share on sales of $1.55 billion, according to a Thomson Financial poll.

MeadWestvaco didn't fare too well in the fourth quarter, as profit declined 34 percent. Although pricing on its high-quality paperboard and productivity at its paperboard mills both improved, hefty restructuring charges offset results.

Elsewhere in the sector, paper company Bowater Inc. recently widened its first-quarter loss and missed Wall Street estimates by a wide margin. Bowater said weakness in newsprint demand and a seasonal slowdown in the coated paper market weighed on profit.

Bowater's results provided further evidence of weakness in newsprint demand and a seasonal slowdown in the coated paper market, analysts said.

Shares of MeadWestvaco declined 16 cents to $33.04 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday, and are up 33.5 percent since a 52-week low of $24.76, hit in August.


© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

From Bad To Worse: Newspapers' Circ Declines

From Bad To Worse: Newspapers' Circ Declines
by Erik Sass, Tuesday, May 1, 2007 8:00 AM ET
http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.san&s=59553&Nid=29924&p=204904


AMERICA'S FLAGSHIP NEWSPAPERS ARE STILL afloat, but their crews may want to don swimsuits soon. The Audit Bureau of Circulations posted numbers Monday showing that in the six months ending March 2007, total daily circulation fell 2.1% to 44,961,066. Sunday circ fell 3.1% to 48,102,437, compared to the same period last year.


The ABC FAS-FAX numbers follow a litany of bad industry news over the last few weeks, including weak first-quarter earnings from leading newspaper companies, and a decline in the housing market, with ominous implications for newspaper classifieds.

This marks the 17th straight year of decline for both weekday and Sunday circs; this is an industry in distress. Indeed, the latest ABC FAS-FAX numbers look almost identical to previous figures, released biannually in what has become a grim drumbeat of contraction. In the September 2006 report, daily circ fell 2.8% as Sunday circ dropped 3.4%; in March 2006 they fell 2.5% and 3.1%, respectively; September 2005, 2.6% and 3.1%; and March 2005, 1.9% and 2.5%.

As in previous years, big metro dailies took some of the biggest hits, with The New York Times down 1.9%, the Los Angeles Times down 4.2% to 815,723, The Washington Post down 3.5% to 699,130, Chicago Tribune down 2.1% to 566,827, Houston Chronicle down 2% to 504,114, Dallas Morning News down 14.3% to 411,919, the San Francisco Chronicle down 2.9%, Long Island's Newsday down 6.9% to 398,231, and The Boston Globe down 3.7% to 382,503.

These figures actually contain (relatively) good news for some of the big titles, as their percentage rate of decline appears to be slowing. In the September 2006 ABC report, the New York Times' daily circ was down 3.5%, Los Angeles Times 8%, San Francisco Chronicle 5.3% and The Boston Globe 6.7%. On the other hand, losses accelerated slightly at the Chicago Tribune and The Washington Post, increasing by about half a percentage point.

In this gloomy environment, publications that hold their own are success stories: USA Today's circ is up 0.5% and The Wall Street Journal grew 0.6%. The biggest standouts were New York City's two daily tabloids, as the New York Daily News grew 1.4% to 718,174, and the New York Post jumped a remarkable 7.6% to 724,748.

In recent weeks, the nation's biggest newspaper companies have posted weak first-quarter results, citing revenue declines due to Internet competition. In the first quarter of 2007, the New York Times Company saw print ad revenue decline 3.4%, compared to the same period last year, as total profit fell 9.9% to $54.5 million. At the Tribune Company, overall operating revenues slipped 4% to $1.2 billion and operating profit was down 16% to $181 million. Gannett saw total revenues decline slightly from $1.88 billion in 2006 to $1.87 billion in 2007, as net income fell from $235.3 million in first quarter 2006 to $210.6 million in 2007, a roughly 10.5% drop.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Mergers changing face of forest industry

Mergers changing face of forest industry
A survey shows B.C. is at the forefront of a process that is creating regionalized businesses

Gordon Hamilton
Vancouver Sun
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/business/story.html?id=aefd1255-7539-4247-bcce-106e3a43945b

Thursday, April 26, 2007


Mergers and acquisitions -- some of the largest of which involve Canadian companies -- are tearing down the vertically integrated global forest industry and rebuilding it as regionalized, specialty businesses, according to a new PricewaterhouseCoopers survey.

And British Columbia is at the forefront of this industry-wide transformation, where financial players -- such as New York's Third Avenue Management and B.C. billionaire Jim Pattison -- are influencing the new direction, said PwC partner Craig Campbell, who contributed to the report.

"Ownership has very much changed. It's not only visible in the name changes on the front gate, but also back in the share registers," Campbell said in an interview Wednesday.

The PwC survey, titled Branching Out, identifies Montreal-based Domtar Inc.'s $3.3-billion US consolidation with American giant Weyerhaeuser's fine paper business as the second-largest deal in the world last year, and suggests that Weyerhaeuser is not finished hiving off assets.

Weyerhaeuser operates three sawmills in the B.C. Interior. Its Kamloops pulp mill became part of the new Domtar. The report says Weyerhaeuser is North America's largest remaining vertically integrated player and is coming under mounting pressure to restructure its remaining assets.

"They will be looking at all their assets. Canada and B.C. would be front and centre in terms of what they are evaluating," Campbell said.

West Fraser Timber Co.'s $325-million US purchase of International Paper's southern U.S. sawmills, and Cascade's $476-million acquisition from Domtar of a 50-per-cent stake in Norampac, are in the top 10 North American deals of 2006.

The largest deal was International Paper's $5-billion US sale last December of 1.6 million hectares of southern U.S. forestlands to institutional timberland investors. International Paper has led the transformation away from large, vertically integrated companies, and today is a product specialist, focused on packaging and uncoated fine papers. It has a global reach, branching out into China, Brazil and Russia.

The new emerging business model has separated forestlands from manufacturing, selling them to timber investment management organizations. Pulp and paper companies are being uncoupled from sawmills and other wood products businesses.

In B.C., Weyerhaeuser's former coastal assets have been uncoupled; the private timberlands going into privately-owned Island Timberlands. The sawmills and Crown tenures were merged with Western Forest Products. The driving force behind the restructuring on the Coast was Brookfield Asset Management and its Tricap Restructuring Fund.

In the Interior, Canfor Corp. uncoupled its pulp assets from the sawmills last July, creating Canfor Pulp Income fund, which trades separately.

"The root cause of this is under-performance across the industry and when you have an under-performing industry, you get these financial players having a look, scratching their heads and asking 'why is this industry chronically under-performing?'"

The trend for the financial players is to sell off non-core assets and focus on core assets, he said. The next step after uncoupling assets, is horizontal consolidation across the different stages of the value chain, a model International Paper has already adopted.

Paper Mill - Biofuels, wind, solar eyed as viable options for Wisconsin

Interest in renewable energy on the rise

Biofuels, wind, solar eyed as viable options for Wisconsin

By Pete Bach
Post-Crescent staff writer


Wisconsin appears to be all about cultivating renewable energy sources.


A look around the region finds a Neenah paper mill among the leaders in the developing field, while an ethanol production plant is going full tilt west of Oshkosh.


Now the prospect that a northern Wisconsin paper mill might become the first fossil fuel independent facility of its type in North America is another step closer to reality.


These projects represent a mounting effort to develop alternate energy sources as Wisconsin strives for greater independence from oil and natural gas to power homes and industrial plants.


Gov. Jim Doyle has made the exploration of renewable energy one of his missions.


In early April, he announced his "25 by 25" initiative — a venture with a goal of garnering 25 percent of Wisconsin's electricity and 25 percent of the state's transportation fuels from renewable sources by 2025.


"The fact is, if an oilfield in Iran has to compete against a farm field in Wisconsin, that's a very good thing for the environment, for our economy and for the world," he said in announcing the initiative.


Going green

Lending new impetus to the conservation measures is new legislation sponsored by state Sen. Robert Cowles, R-Green Bay, that will require state utilities to produce 10 percent of their energy from renewable sources by 2015.


Spokesmen for Milwaukee-based We Energies, which supplies electricity to most of Outagamie County and parts of Calumet, Waupaca and Winnebago counties, said the utility is looking at a range of alternatives to go with existing options.


"We're just on the front end for meeting the new requirements," said Pat Keily, program manager for We Energies' renewable energy programs. "So there will be a lot of things that we'll be looking at and exploring. They'll be conducive to the diversification of our mix. We'll be looking at wind and solar and biomass."


A couple of We programs deal with customer-owned solar power arrangements.


"Solar photovoltaic is more conducive to customer owned, customer sited" systems, Keily said. "We purchase all the output at 22½ cents per kilowatt hour. And we feed that back into our Energy for Tomorrow program."


The Neenah Paper mill in Neenah has long participated in that program, and as of last September was still in the state lead having purchased 10.9 million kilowatt hours of renewable energy.


Meantime, We Energy's Solar Electric Development Program has drawn more than passing interest from area firms.


"There's at least three large customers in the Fox Valley that are pursuing this," said Randy Sabel, We Energies' principal account manager. "Two of them have done studies already and cost analysis and know what their facilities would accommodate. They have an idea of what the payback is. Now it's a matter of getting corporate approval to move forward with it."


The companies, which he did not identify, can apply for sizeable grants to partially defray the tab of new large solar electric systems.


Bio fuels

Utica Energy, an ethanol plant near Oshkosh that derives its product from corn, is expanding its range of Renew fueling stations and hopes to have a dozen open by Memorial Day.


The stations will provide the E85 mixture that can be used by specially equipped vehicles as well as the popular 10 percent ethanol/gas blends that are widely available.


"We're in our fourth year and it's going really well," said Jay Stoflet, director of marketing. "We produce 56 million gallons of ethanol a year."


The partners have invested in another ethanol plant going up in Jefferson in southern Wisconsin that'll have a capacity of 130 million gallons per year.


Valley paper makers are keeping close tabs on a state-of-the-art biorefinery planned at Flambeau River Papers, a Park Falls mill that makes book paper.


The biorefinery, carrying a $213 million pricetag, would make the mill among the first industrial plants to co-produce pulp and ethanol from wood. Up to 20 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol annually would be produced from the spent pulping liquor.


Harnessing the wind

A major project to tap the wind off Lake Winnebago's southeast shore to generate electricity is about to move forward in earnest.


We Energies' Blue Sky Green Field wind project in the towns of Calumet and Marshfield in northeast Fond du Lac County will generate 145 megawatts of electricity, enough to power about 36,000 average homes. A total of 88 wind turbines will be installed.


The turbines, similar to the two that whirl along U.S. 41 south of Fond du Lac, are each capable of generating 1.65 megawatts.


Construction will get underway this summer and is expected to take a year to complete.


Reusing old mills

At the same time, the former Smart Papers mill — which reopened Aug. 9 under the new ownership of Butch Johnson of Hayward — is going full tilt making 400 tons daily of book paper.


Ben Thorp, a forest biorefinery expert that Johnson tapped to lead the planning, speaks with great confidence about the prospects despite a sharp disappointment. The project failed in its bid to land an $80 million grant from the Department of Energy.


"We were told we finished 9th of 44 and they only funded six," said Thorp. "We didn't get funded but we got very good feedback on the strengths and weaknesses of the proposal. We're continuing to do engineering work. We're setting out to fix each and every one of the weaknesses, and that in itself is going to take several months."


In addition to selling 400 tons of paper a day, Flambeau River makes 150 tons a day of hardwood pulp. And they're buying more than 100 tons a day of pulp. What the project is going to do is add 500 tons a day of pulp to the mix, Thorp said, with the mill using about half that production. In addition, the design will produce 440 tons a day of lignin and 20 million gallons of ethanol from wood a year for which markets are readily available.


"Our outputs are all spoken for, presold," Thorp said.


Right now the mill consumes 1.2 trillion BTUs of fossil fuel.


The project would add either a second bark boiler or so called biomass gasifier.


"And that will replace the 1.2 trillion BTUs of natural gas and coal that they now use," Thorp said. "It'll make Flambeau River the first integrated pulp and paper mill in North America that's fossil fuel free."


Project planners were able to identify equity partners or individuals willing to provide the $140 million balance.


"Not winning that government grant set us back, but now we're looking at continuing on and getting additional private funding going forward," Johnson said. "As we do that, we're running more pulp trials."


Exploring alternatives

Abandoned paper mill sites would seem to provide a logical place for launching new ventures that make the most of emerging technology. That's the case some places.


But not in Neenah, where the empty hulk of the huge Glatfelter paper mill dominates the downtown in wake of the firm's shut down last June. The city is eyeing a more aesthetic future for the site.


"We feel the highest and best use of that property is retail and commercial," said Mayor George Scherck.