Displaying items by tag: Prince Albert mill

The Prince Albert Pulp Mill is producing green power, but start-up of pulp production is still 12 to 18 months away, a representative recently told a local gathering. 

Dale Paterson, vice-president of operations for Paper Excellence, which owns the Prince Albert mill, provided an update on the mill's status at a Chamber of Commerce luncheon. 

Based on that presentation, the Prince Albert Daily Herald reported Mar. 29 that Paper Excellence is investing in a technology that is less costly and will allow the refurbished mill to produce both traditional paper pulp and dissolving pulp. 

The capital expenditure on this new technology is expected to be between $85 and $90 million less than the company previously anticipated, Paterson said. 

When Paper Excellence purchased the operation in 2011, the plan was to produce dissolving pulp at the site by the fall of 2013. Now, with dissolving pulp prices considerably lower than at that time, the company is exploring the production of market pulp, but must work around a non-compete agreement signed with Weyerhaeuser, the mill's previous owner. 

According to the Daily Herald, the mill faced a higher level of equipment failure than expected, and Paper Excellence will spend an additional $75 million to deal with issues arising from the mill's five-year shutdown. 

In the meantime, the mill's green power plant is currently exporting about 9.5 MWH to SaskPower, and employs 24 people. 

In total, the mill is currently employing 113 people and spending about $1.8 million per month between personnel and materials, the majority of which goes directly back into the local economy, reports the Daily Herald. 

Source: Pulp & Paper Canada

Published in Canadian News
Tagged under

The Prince Albert Pulp Mill is open for the first time in five years and moving toward a full restart of pulp operations. Except this time, the mill will be making dissolving pulp instead of kraft. Paper Excellence has finalized its purchase of the facility in Prince Albert, Sask., that has been shut down since 2006.

 

Paper Excellence will be investing more than $200 million to convert the mill so that it can produce dissolving pulp. At least 200 direct jobs and hundreds of indirect jobs will be brought back to the community as the mill restarts.

 

Paper Excellence's Canadian vice-president of operations Ed Roste noted that Paper Excellence is embarking on an accelerated restart program with a targeted restart timeline of 12 months, ensuring that the mill is operational by the second quarter of 2012.

 

The company has begun hiring for key personnel in Prince Albert and its office will be fully operational within a week. Engineering contracts are being negotiated as are key equipment purchases.

 

The new timeline for restarting the mill will require major forest harvest activity no later than late fall this year. Roste said discussions are advancing well with industry and First Nations partners, government and a number of support operations.

 

"Saskatchewan has been a great place to operate with our mill in Meadow Lake," Roste said. "We are very excited to revive the Prince Albert pulp mill as part of our ongoing and long-term commitments to our forestry operations in Saskatchewan and Canada, and we thank the premier, the minister and the Saskatchewan government for their strong support."

 

Commitments made by the provincial government include provision of an adequate fibre supply, a clean biomass power purchase agreement with SaskPower, an agreement to maintain the existing environmental liability for a period of time when the mill operated as a Crown Corporation prior to 1986, and new pension plan agreements that respect the obligations to previous employees.

 

The government is also providing a letter of commitment for the $500,000 per year that it is allocating towards training of new mill operators in new mill processes during the mill's first two years of operation under its new owners.

Published in Canadian News
Tagged under