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Wood products takes a hit

Started by Frank_Pender, October 05, 2005, 09:59:13 AM

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Frank_Pender

Weyerhaeuser will close mill next year.  The plan is to close a pulp and paper mill in Prince Albert early next year, eliminating 690 jobs.  The blame is on poor market conditions.  The paper section will cease about January 2 and the pulp portion until Spring. 

In some more great news of the folks in Georgia, Georgia Pacific is cutting more than 1,000 jobs in a "broad restructuring that aims to save $100 million per year".  They have indicated that they will idle as many as four tissue paper machines and about 70 lines that convert large tissue rolls into sizes that consumers can use, eliminates 850 jobs in North America.  The tissues affected are Angel Soft and Quilted Northern  tolet papers and Mardi Gras napkins.

The thought is perhaps some of us might want to stock up on some of these products. :P
Frank Pender

beenthere

Yeaahhh!!  Like when I'm gone, and my kids can ponder why the attic is stuffed full of rolls of toilet paper.  ;D ;D ;D

That rumor went around years ago that there would be a toilet paper shortage, and there was such a buying frenzy, that indeed, there was a short term shortage created.  Best sense to me is 'steady as you go' so as to not turn the boat over.  :)
Sorry Frank, couldn't resist 'shootin' at your attempt to raise the value of toilet paper to keep those mills open.  :) :)

In the past, the newly mandated enviro laws make shutting a mill down easier than re-building it to meet the standards. Unfortunate that it happens, but a number of 'old' mills in Wisconsin bit the dust for that reason. A lot of other factors as well, not the least of which is competition from outside the country to supply the goods.
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

Frank_Pender

Beenther, thanks.  I do not have stock in either outfit, that I know of.   :D
Frank Pender

karl

My daughter works for a manufacturer and supplier of chemicals for paper mills- they have been steadily decreasing size/employees because of  Chinese manufacuring of chemicals for less than half their cost, and because of import of paper and liquid pulp.
"I ask for wisdom and strength, Not to be superior to my brothers, but to be able to fight my greatest enemy, myself"  - from Ojibwa Prayer.

Sprucegum

The mill in Prince Albert closed a couple days ago.

They had done about $250,000,000 in upgrades only 3-4 years ago ???

DanG

Frank, folks don't need as much tissue when they can't afford to eat. ::) :D

When the Great Depression was finally over, one fella didn't know what kind of tissue to buy.  He said he'd been eating soda crackers so long, he was just using a whisk broom! ::)
"I don't feel like an old man.  I feel like a young man who has something wrong with him."  Dick Cavett
"Beat not thy sword into a plowshare, rather beat the sword of thine enemy into a plowshare."

Frank_Pender

Frank Pender

Percy

Quote from: DanG on October 05, 2005, 08:20:34 PM
Frank, folks don't need as much tissue when they can't afford to eat. ::) :D

When the Great Depression was finally over, one fella didn't know what kind of tissue to buy.  He said he'd been eating soda crackers so long, he was just using a whisk broom! ::)
haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahahhaahahahahahahahahahaha
GOLDEN RULE : The guy with the gold, makes the rules.

Mike_Barcaskey

DanG, there's coffee on the computer screen, now where are the tissues
It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.

Minnesota_boy

If it was some of that freeze-dried coffee, just use the whisk broom.  ;D :D :D
I eat a high-fiber diet.  Lots of sawdust!

Frank_Pender

PZercy, your Western English humor is great.  The trouble with a whiskbroom is that, they are few and far between.  We do not see many of them around here, yet.  Perhaps with the paper shortage they might have a great comeback in this region.  I might have to start saving other forms of paper for special uses other than the Woodfurnace for the house and kiln. 8)
Frank Pender

DanG

I guess I knocked this train off the track, didn't I? ::) :D

To get it back on;  A number of paper mills down this way shut down several years ago because of plastic grocery bags.  An incredible amount of brown Kraft paper was being used to tote canned goods home, before that.  It was a tough go for some folks for a while, but things seem to have worked out well.  The mill at Port St. Joe was the center of that county's economy.  Those that didn't work there, worked in the woods or hauling logs.  Now, with the stink of the mill gone, other businesses are moving in, and tourists are coming, too.  A huge OSB plant has been built North of there, and the log trucks are once again ruling the roads.  The million+acres of trees that were destined for grocery sacks are now being used to build houses. :)
"I don't feel like an old man.  I feel like a young man who has something wrong with him."  Dick Cavett
"Beat not thy sword into a plowshare, rather beat the sword of thine enemy into a plowshare."

Tom

........and now you can't get your groceries in a Kraft paper bag anymore.  They use those confounded plastic bags and put one item in each bag so that you leave the store with a whole arm-full of the things.   We'd still be using the Kraft bags if someone hadn't complained about cutting down the trees. 

Now we have to find some way of disposing of all these plastic bags.  The elected officials have gotten hold of it now and there is a regionally selective interest in imposing a special TAX on each and every bag used.  That's smart, eh? 

The Grocery Stores are upset because the paper sack cost 4 cents and the plastic bag cost 1 cent.  The tax has been recommended to be 15 or 18 cents a piece for the the plastic bag.  That should go a long way toward steering the public back to using paper now that the paper mills have closed.  :-\ :)

karl

Dang, I thought they used all those plastic bags so you had to make at least two trips into the house with your $150. "worth" of groceries and you would think you got more for your money.

I'm old enough to remember bringing groceries home in a box or the paper bags we took back to the general and feed store...........
"I ask for wisdom and strength, Not to be superior to my brothers, but to be able to fight my greatest enemy, myself"  - from Ojibwa Prayer.

DanG

There used to be a little grocery chain called Jewel-T.  They offered low prices via no-frills shopping.  Instead of placing items on the shelf, they'd just cut the box open and set the whole thing on there...stuff like that.  You had to bring your own container to ferry your stuff out to the car.  I don't know what ever happened to them. ???

Karl, I believe that everything on this earth has a purpose.  There seems to be a disproportinate number of things that are just put here to keep us humble. :-\
"I don't feel like an old man.  I feel like a young man who has something wrong with him."  Dick Cavett
"Beat not thy sword into a plowshare, rather beat the sword of thine enemy into a plowshare."

Furby

Quote from: DanG on October 06, 2005, 09:52:06 PM
There used to be a little grocery chain called Jewel-T. They offered low prices via no-frills shopping. Instead of placing items on the shelf, they'd just cut the box open and set the whole thing on there...stuff like that. You had to bring your own container to ferry your stuff out to the car. I don't know what ever happened to them. ???
We have Aldi and Save-A-Lot, pretty much the same deal.

Frank_Pender

Yep, you got that right, DanG; nails in logs. :'(
Frank Pender

beenthere

DanG I remembered them too.  Looked around and found, it appears, that they went in with Osco Drug and this short article sheds a bit of light on their operation. Maybe in Iowa yet.

Jewel T
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

submarinesailor

I must be getting old if I remember the Jewel-T store in Manassas, Va.  Oh so many years ago. ::) :'( ::) :'(

Bruce

ARKANSAWYER

  
  I read some publications and see where the large lumber and paper companies are selling off land and assets.  It makes their bottom line look good for a few years.   Here in Arkansas IP has been selling off land and closing mills pretty steady the last few years.  Like most large corps they are paying the top hands to much money and firing the people that make the money for them.  So you sell off assets to keep in the black so top hands make more coin becuase the last quarter looked so good.  Then one day there is just a shell of a company and it folds up.
 China can not grow enough food for themselves much less enough sticks for themselves and us.  If the US and Canada does not wake up and remember that we are the bread basket of the world then we will all be hurting.  Yes the rain forest has sticks but it takes a long time for that poor soil to grow more.  Plus they are wasting alot of it so in 20 years they will not be a factor.  China is stripping the timber of the area and pulling alot from Russia and India.   As the number of people in the world grows a bushel of wheat will be worth more then a barrel of oil now.   Oil may be what is running the machine now but you have to feed the one driving it.

 It looks like we will be missing the ole Sears and Roebuck catalog more then ever.   I can slice pretty thin on my band mill and with a Lathe-mizer might could turn some paper.  ???
ARKANSAWYER

Coon

With Weyerhauser shutting down the pulp and paper mill in Prince Albert, Sask.  Many more jobs besides the 690 are at stake.  The local economy will hurt because of this.  Weyerhauser has the monopoly of the timber here in Canada and from my opinion are going about the forestry industry management practices in the wrong ways.  Just because the paper prices are down why shut the mills down.  As they have stated it is not the supply that is hurting it is the demand.  So why not just produce on a smaller scale??  why not go into a specialized paper production of some kind????  All in all we have to admit that Weyerhauser does not care about the unemployment of the people or the poverty of this province. 
Norwood Lumbermate 2000 w/Kohler,
Husqvarna, Stihl and, Jonsereds Saws

Frank_Pender

Amen, Coon.  You right on the money. 8)
Frank Pender

customsawyer

It was just a few years ago when IP bought out Union Camp down here in the south and then it started to close alot of those mills down and the industry as a whole had to change its way of thinking in the south I don't want people to think that I feel it was IP fault as there were alot of other factors involved in the process but buy and large it seems to work out the people with grit will find a way to make a living and the people that were just riding on the coat tails of others will find another coat tail to ride.
Two LT70s, Nyle L200 kiln, 4 head Pinheiro planer, 30" double surface Cantek planer, Lucas dedicated slabber, Slabmizer, and enough rolling stock and chainsaws to keep it all running.
www.thecustomsawyer.com

Frickman

I tend to look at things in free-market, Austrian economics light, with supply and demand controlling the market. If these big companies want to sell off assets, bless their greedy little hearts. If there is a demand for some type of wood product, someone is going to find a way to economically fill the need. Any of us who are involved in the wood industry do that everyday, or we won't be in business much longer. The scaling back of these large companies is actually creating more opportunities for the smaller producers, which many of us here are.

There has been a trend taking place in business the last decade or two, mass customization. The company model of the 50's and 60's was a very bearaucratic, inflexible structure that was very good at producing mass quantities of a homogeneuos, standarized product. Now consumers are demanding mass produced products made to their unique specs. If you order a Dell computer, it is custom built for you to your specs and shipped in 24 hours. Dell does not keep an inventory of assembled computers, nor an inventory of components. They do not actually pay for a part until the computer is built, their suppliers carry the inventory cost.  This creates a very efficient process for producing a computer, helping to lower the price. What I see, and this is just my observation, is that many companies are unwilling or unable to change and adapt to this new "paradigm" if you will. These companies crumble under their own weight, allowing room for a smaller, more nimble organization to fulfill the demand.

My personal opinion is that over the years the variety of different paper and pulp products has exploded, and these large organizations were better suited for the days when there fewer types of paper manfactured. Now this is coming from a person who has never cut a pulp stick in his life, so take it for what it's worth. I just see the same trend going on in other industries.

If a plant is outdated and inefficient I can see shutting it down. But I can't see divesting of timberland just to make the balance sheet look good. Most wood consuming companies buy at least some material on the open market, but it's nice to have your own to get you through tough times. I guess this is what happens when you turn the day-to-day operation of a company over to MBA's seeking to please Wall Street the next quarter intead of managing for the long-term.
If you're not broke down once in a while, you're not working hard enough

I'm not a hillbilly. I'm an "Appalachian American"

Retired  Conventional hand-felling logging operation with cable skidder and forwarder, Frick 01 handset sawmill

Pretend farmer when I have the time

Percy

Quote from: Frickman on October 09, 2005, 03:47:15 PM
I tend to look at things in free-market, Austrian economics light, with supply and demand controlling the market. If these big companies want to sell off assets, bless their greedy little hearts. If there is a demand for some type of wood product, someone is going to find a way to economically fill the need. Any of us who are involved in the wood industry do that everyday, or we won't be in business much longer. The scaling back of these large companies is actually creating more opportunities for the smaller producers, which many of us here are.

There has been a trend taking place in business the last decade or two, mass customization. The company model of the 50's and 60's was a very bearaucratic, inflexible structure that was very good at producing mass quantities of a homogeneuos, standarized product. Now consumers are demanding mass produced products made to their unique specs. If you order a Dell computer, it is custom built for you to your specs and shipped in 24 hours. Dell does not keep an inventory of assembled computers, nor an inventory of components. They do not actually pay for a part until the computer is built, their suppliers carry the inventory cost.  This creates a very efficient process for producing a computer, helping to lower the price. What I see, and this is just my observation, is that many companies are unwilling or unable to change and adapt to this new "paradigm" if you will. These companies crumble under their own weight, allowing room for a smaller, more nimble organization to fulfill the demand.

My personal opinion is that over the years the variety of different paper and pulp products has exploded, and these large organizations were better suited for the days when there fewer types of paper manfactured. Now this is coming from a person who has never cut a pulp stick in his life, so take it for what it's worth. I just see the same trend going on in other industries.

If a plant is outdated and inefficient I can see shutting it down. But I can't see divesting of timberland just to make the balance sheet look good. Most wood consuming companies buy at least some material on the open market, but it's nice to have your own to get you through tough times. I guess this is what happens when you turn the day-to-day operation of a company over to MBA's seeking to please Wall Street the next quarter intead of managing for the long-term.
I like what you are saying...Globalization has caused corporations to go where "its cheapest" for the reasons you stated. Here in B.C. we have pulpmills/sawmills shutting down all over the place in the last 5 years and we are still using paper/wood products. Hmmmmm its commin from somwhere. That has hurt alot of towns/ regions such as Coons and mine. The flip side is smaller companies are springing up using the resource that the corporations hoarded previously. Case in point, since Skeena Cellulose shut down, I have been able to get logs about a hunnert times more easily than before. I know this doesnt help the displaced workers but this is a fact of life in these days of "globalization".  The only constant is change and trying to land on your feet. Tuff when you are 51 and a bit unsteady on your feet.. :D :D :D :D
GOLDEN RULE : The guy with the gold, makes the rules.

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