Composite Panel Plants Awarded For Safety Records

Fourteen composite panel facilities and one corporation as a whole were recognized for their safety achievements during the Composite Panel Association’s annual spring meeting held last week in Tucson, Arizona.

Louisiana-Pacific Corp. received the Safety Innovation Award for its Behavior-Based Safety Observation Program.

Awards were also given to participating manufacturing plants with exemplary safety records, including acknowledgments for long-term, annual, safety improvement, and safety achievement.  Awards were given to plants with low/less than 277,000 worker-hours per year (Class I) and high/more than 277,000 worker-hours per year (Class II).

The awardees for the best long-term safety record over the past three years were Arauco North America, Malvern, Arkansas (Class I) and Louisiana-Pacific Corp., Roaring River, North Carolina (Class II).

The annual safety award for having zero incidents among Class I plants during 2015 was shared by Arauco North America (MDF), Bennettsville, South Carolina; Kronospan LLC, Eastaboga, Alabama; Plummer Forest Products, Post Falls, Idaho; Roseburg, Taylorsville, Mississippi; and West Fraser Mills Ltd. (WestPine), Quesnel, British Columbia.

From Woodworking Network: https://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/wood/panel-supply/composite-panel-plants-awarded-safety-records?ss=news,news,woodworking_industry_news,news,almanac_market_data,news

Composite Panel Market To Grow 4.21% In 2016

Capacity for the North American composite panel industry is expected to increase 4.21 percent in 2016, Composite Panel Association Chairman Steve Stoler told a record crowd at the CPA’s spring meeting in Tucson, Arizona. Increased usage of engineered wood panels in cabinetry, furniture, flooring and other products is helping spur the growth.

The upward trend follows a three-year capacity decline, reported Stoler, general sales manager of Boise Cascade. Capacity is defined as the amount of panels produced, based on maximum press utilization.

“I’ve been encouraged by signs of growth an new investment in our industry after a long period of inactivity,” Stoler said, citing recent announcements of plant upgrades and new lines. The addition of three mills in Mexico also is projected to increase North American MDF capacity by 10 percent.

The CPA also projects shipments of particleboard and MDF to grow 3 percent in 2016. Last year’s shipments of U.S. and Canadian panels hit 5.561 BSF, which was up 3 percent from 2014 figures.

More than 300 people from more than 100 companies attended the April 17-20 CPA event.

From Woodworking Network: https://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/news/woodworking-industry-news/composite-panel-market-to-grow-4-percent?ss=news,news,woodworking_industry_news,news,almanac_market_data,news

Arizona Moves Forward Without New OSB Plant

Arizona Moves Forward Without New OSB Plant

Arizona Moves Forward Without New OSB Plant

Article by Dan Shell, Managing Editor, Panel World (2012)

At first glance, the scene sounds like the beginning of a good ol’ Western movie: The black-hatted outsider moves in at the last minute and snakes out the local boys who had built up years of goodwill hoping to be awarded a long-awaited business opportunity.

Yet in the story of Arizona Forest Restoration Products (AZFRP) losing out on a major northern Arizona forest stewardship contract to Montana-based Pioneer Forest Products after years of painstaking groundwork with a variety of groups and interests (page 16), there are no real black hats. And despite the lost opportunity to build the westernmost OSB plant in the U.S. and close to key Southwest markets, the good news is badly-needed forest health restoration work in the region will go forward on a scale never seen before on public lands in the U.S.

But it is an interesting story, covering coalition building, dueling economic visions, federal bureaucracy, community development and a ponderosa pine ecosystem in desperate need of restoration work from thinning to riparian zone protection and much more.

That’s the reason we decided to devote the space to a story about an OSB plant that apparently will never exist. That and because of our ongoing communication line with former AZFRP CEO Pascal Berlioux, who contacted Panel World years ago to inform us about what they were doing, then sent periodic updates on AZFRP’s progress in building support for its proposal among Four Forest Restoration Initiative (4FRI) stakeholder members.

The 4FRI project came about after Arizona federal lands officials, seeing vast acreages hammered by wildfires during the past decade, had to come up with a new way of addressing forest health conditions in the state. But the traditional timber sale-by-sale process wouldn’t make much of a dent in the 2.4 million acres across four national forests that need thinning and restoration work.

That’s why AZFRP’s OSB proposal was important: By focusing on small timber, the operation sought to avoid another traditional timber sale problem with sawmills in the inherent pressure to cut larger logs that, right or wrong, inevitably leads to court and nothing getting done in the woods. Also, AZFRP had gained unprecedented agreements (for what they’re worth) and support from major environmental groups for its OSB plant proposal that would in turn pay for the forest health restoration work that organizations on all sides of the issue agree need to be done.

Instead of an OSB plant to utilize the small-diameter raw material coming off an unprecedented 300,000 acres over 10 years in the first of several large-scale stewardship contracts, the Forest Service chose a sawmill operation producing edge-glued panels for door and window stock, plus an associated biofuel plant. Some of the reasons why make for quite interesting reading.

Yet while some have questioned federal actions in awarding the contract, the good news is that in this story, the forest products industry guys—sawmillers and OSB producers alike—are the ones wearing the white hats as they ride to the rescue and provide the investment that’s making the 4FRI restoration work possible.

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