Winston Plywood & Veneer Hosts Mississippi Groundbreaking

From: Panel World Staff

Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant and officials from Winston Plywood and Veneer held a groundbreaking ceremony January 30 at the site of the company’s new manufacturing facility in Louisville, Miss. The project represents an investment of approximately $50 million and will create 400 jobs.

In April 2014, a tornado destroyed the facility in Louisville. Since that time, Winston Plywood and Veneer has remained committed to rebuilding and expanding its operations in Louisville. In addition to the investment made by the company, disaster recovery funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency will be used to build the facility.

“I am grateful to the Winston Plywood and Veneer team for their steadfast dedication to the Louisville community and the state of Mississippi following the tornado that devastated the area last spring,” the governor commented

“Winston Plywood and Veneer has forged a unique partnership with the state of Mississippi, Mayor Hill, and Winston County to not only rebuild this plywood mill but to help this region recover,” said Dr. Richard Baldwin, president of Winston Plywood and Veneer. “That daily collaboration, since the first moments after the tornado hit, has delivered the resources and focus we needed to be here today, with construction on a new, state-of-the-art plywood mill officially under way. This will be a great facility and will enhance the quality of life in this community for many years to come.”

Read more on this story in the March issue of Panel World…

Swanson Group Will Rebuild Oregon Plywood Mill

Swanson Group Will Rebuild Oregon Plywood Mill

Officials with Swanson Group Mfg. LLC announced plans to rebuild the company’s Springfield, Ore. plywood plant after it was destroyed by fire in mid-July 2014. According to Swanson Group President and CEO Steve Swanson, “We are excited about this opportunity. Springfield is well positioned in terms of log supply and workforce, which make our site an attractive place to recapitalize.”

Plans are to have the new mill finished and ready to start up by mid 2016. The new plant will employ 190 and operate similar to the old facility in terms of capacity and product lines, with a few twists.

According to Swanson, approval for the new building was in mid February. Most of the equipment purchases will take place between now and May, and the new building is expected to be complete and ready by fall 2015.

While Swanson personnel are still looking at equipment types and suppliers and combinations of new and used equipment, Swanson says the mill will utilize a state-of-the-art triple-spindle peeling system with sheet and random stacking; two dryers, one handling wides and the other randoms, feeding to respective stacking systems; and a layup line and related systems that enable more overlay production.

 

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Arauco Announces Particleboard Expansion

From: Panel World Staff

Arauco is investing $30 million to expand particleboard and TFL (thermally fused laminate/melamine) capacity for its Carolina Particleboard Mill in Bennettsville, SC.

The particleboard expansion, with a scheduled startup in the fourth quarter of this year, will increase production by 60MMSF (¾ in. basis or 100,000 m3) annually through increased dryer capacity. This project will also improve the plant’s flexibility to source a broader range of raw material in response to regional changes in the wood supply mix.

To complement the panel expansion, Arauco is also investing in a next generation fast-cycle press for TFL production, which is also scheduled to start in the fourth quarter. The new installation will add to the three existing fast-cycle TFL presses in the region.

The new line will further equip the particleboard and MDF site with a state-of-the-art press featuring higher throughput, faster changeover capabilities, higher pressure for deep textures and paper alignment technology for registered emboss designs. The company’s goal with these investments is to meet the growing demand for particleboard, and to broaden its TFL design offering in the region.

“These capacity and value-add investments translate into improved product sourcing options for our customers, and in turn generate additional long-term jobs for this manufacturing complex and the Bennettsville community at large,” states Mike Reardon, Regional Manufacturing Director.

Norbord To Become Largest OSB Producer

Norbord To Become Largest OSB Producer

Norbord To Become Largest OSB Producer

 

Norbord Inc. and Ainsworth Lumber are merging and creating the largest OSB producer in the world with production capacity of 7.7 billion SF, according to the companies.

The transaction entails Ainsworth shareholders receiving 0.1321 of a Norbord share for each Ainsworth share.

The combined company generated USD $1.63 billion in sales and USD $143 million in Adjusted EBITDA for the 12 months ended September 27, 2014.

The transaction combines Norbord’s low cost operations and larger mill network with Ainsworth’s innovation in value-added strand-based engineered wood products, according to the ­companies.

“This transaction unites two complementary businesses behind a common vision of enhanced service to our customers and growth in North America, Europe and Asia,” says Peter Wijnbergen, Norbord’s president and CEO. “Norbord and Ainsworth are each low-cost producers in their respective regions, and with our complementary operations and a more diverse range of specialty products, we will be better able to serve our customers across the globe.”

Norbord, based in Toronto, operates seven OSB North American mills (six of them in the U.S. South) with one mill in Quebec, along with four mills in Europe. Ainsworth, based in Vancouver, BC, operates four Canadian OSB mills—three in Western Canada and one in Ontario. Prior to this transaction, Norbord reported it was third in OSB production capacity behind Louisiana-Pacific and Georgia-Pacific.

“The combined company will be better able to weather market cycles through increased geographic diversification. The transaction will enhance each company’s strong North American presence with the more stable margin European operations of Norbord and Asia-focused export business of Ainsworth,” according to a statement.

The new company will have opportunities to increase capacity through the expansion of Norbord’s OSB production in Western Europe, the restart of Norbord’s two idled mills in North America, and the completion of Ainsworth’s second line in Grand Prairie, Alberta.

Management expects that the combined company will deliver significant cost savings through substantial operating synergies estimated at USD $45 million annually, achievable over an 18-24 month period.

The combined company will operate under the Norbord name, and Norbord CEO Wijnbergen will lead the business following the close of the transaction. Ainsworth CEO Jim Lake has agreed to stay on with the combined company in an advisory capacity for six months.

Upon completion of the transaction, Norbord shareholders will own approximately 63% and Ainsworth shareholders will own approximately 37% of the combined company.

The transaction, which was approved by the companies’ respective boards, is expected to close in the first quarter of 2015. The transaction is not reportable under the U.S. Hart-Scott-Rodino Act or the Canadian Competition Act due to common controlling shareholder; however, U.S. and Canadian antitrust and competition authorities may review the transactions at their discretion.

Brookfield Asset Management, which controls 52% and 55% of Norbord and Ainsworth shares, respectively, has entered into voting support agreements for the transaction.

In 2014, Ainsworth and Louisiana-Pacific announced LP’s purchase of Ainsworth, but after determining that regulatory approvals couldn’t be obtained without significant divestitures and expensive litigation, they canceled the deal.

The U.S. Dept. of Justice had said that the transaction likely would have substantially lessened competition in the market for the production of OSB sold to customers in the Pacific Northwest and Upper Midwest regions of the U.S.

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Gary Raemhild Dies At 67

Gary Raemhild Dies At 67

Gary Raemhild Dies At 67

 

Gary Allen Raemhild, a major figure in the development and implementation of air emissions control technology for the panel industry, died March 21 in Seattle, Wash. He was 67.

Raemhild led Geoenergy International to the forefront of particulate control technology in panel products operations. Since 2012, Raemhild was a member of the senior management team for TSI, Inc., which brought in Raemhild to lead its launch into emission control systems.

Born in Naselle, Wash., and after graduating from high school in 1965, Raemhild attended the University of Washington where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering. During summers between his university years, he worked in the woods alongside his father for Penttila Logging Company of Naselle.

During his time at UW, Raemhild was a member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity. After his undergraduate studies, he pursued UW graduate education in air resources engineering. During and after graduate studies, Raemhild teamed with his faculty mentor, Professor Michael Pilat, to present more than 10 scientific papers at national and international meetings. Raemhild received his Master’s degree in August 1972.

In the summer of 1972, Raemhild accepted an offer from the Technical University of Munich for employment as a Scientific Fellow in the Institute for Nuclear Reactor Safety, where he collaborated with Klaus Liesch to develop a model for determining the heat transfer within the nuclear power reactor core in the event of a ruptured cooling pipe. This work resulted in the publication “Heat Transfer in the Core Region of the Nuclear Power Plant During a Loss of Coolant Accident” with Raemhild as primary author.

In early 1988, Raemhild and longtime friend Steve Jaasund executed a management agreement that led to their majority ownership of Geoenergy International Corp., a company founded in 1982 that had commercialized the E-Tube Wet Electrostatic Precipitator (wet ESP), designed to remove blue haze particulate emissions from plywood veneer dryers. Under the new ownership, the Geoenergy technology quickly became the standard piece of pollution control equipment for the panel industry.

“We could see the capabilities of the technology, the value in its patents, and the market potential,” Raemhild told Panel World magazine during an interview in 1999. During the mid-90s, Geoenergy, based in Kent, Wash., also developed products complementary to the wet ESP.

AH Lundberg Associates ultimately purchased the proprietary information from Geoenergy in 2002 and formed the “Geoenergy Division.” Raemhild and Jaasund headed up the division, and carried on the business of supplying air pollution control systems to the wood products industry while also branching into other industries.

Raemhild enjoyed the outdoor sports of trout and salmon fishing, bird hunting, clam digging, golfing and was an expert downhill skier, stemming from his youth when he and friends would venture off in his Corvair convertible for night skiing.

He is survived by his wife, Meran, children Lauren, Ian and Garrett, and a sister, Beverly Malone (Richard) and nephew, Michael Malone.

A memorial service was held March 29 at the Hoffner, Fisher & Harvey Funeral Home in Seattle.

 

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Norbord To Become Largest OSB Producer

Flakeboard Buys Three Mills

Flakeboard Buys Three Mills

 

Flakeboard America Ltd., a U.S. subsidiary of Arauco, is acquiring the U.S. panel assets of SierraPine, including three composite board plants: particleboard plants at Martell and Springfield Calif. and a MDF plant at Medford, Ore.

The acquisitions will enlarge the panel capacity of the Arauco plants in North America to 2 billion SF (3/4 in. basis) or 3.5 million m3.

Meanwhile SierraPine states it will permanently close its particleboard plant in Adel, Ga., which was built in 1965.

Arauco acquired Flakeboard’s seven composite board mills and Uniboard’s particleboard/MDF/laminate complex in Moncure, NC in 2012. The North American mills operate under the Flakeboard name.

The Medford plant opened as a division of Medco in 1975.

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The monthly Panel World Industry Newsletter reaches over 3,000 who represent primary panel production operations.

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