RECYCLING IN A SMALLER WORLD
An increasingly global economy is changing the face of the recovered fiber market, according to Bill Moore of the Atlanta-based consulting firm Moore & Associates.
Moore moderated the keynote session on the global nature of today’s paper market at the 2006 Paper Recycling Conference & Trade Show, held June 25-27 in Chicago. He told attendees that from 2000 to 2005, North America’s share of the recovered fiber going to China shrank from 80 percent to 46 percent. While North America is still supplying nearly half of China’s imported recycled fiber, other players have snapped up market share in recent years, including Western Europe and Japan—a consequence of globalization.
Moore identified several factors driving the market for old corrugated containers (OCC), including China’s paperboard overcapacity and continuing shutdown of U.S. paperboard mill capacity. According to figures provided by Moore, of the 10 million tons of new worldwide paper making capacity started up in 2005, only 8 percent was in North America. In addition, more than 2 million tons of capacity has been shut or is scheduled for closure in 2006 in North America, according to Moore.
R.S. Baxi of J&H Sales International Ltd. told attendees that the demand from China is be expected to continue because of the expanding paper production in the country in plants that rely mainly on imported material. He said production rates in China were nearly 20 million metric tons in 1995 and are expected to reach 80 million metric tons in 10 years. "As production continues, so will demand," said Baxi. He also identified Japan as an emerging key player in the Asian market exporting to China.
Steve Voorhees, CFO of Rock-Tenn Co., Norcross, Ga., identified increasing price transparency as another factor having a sizable impact on the way fiber moves around the world. He said that in the domestic market, the use of published pricing decreases the importance of marketing material somewhat.
On the consuming side, Voorhees said mill shut downs and increasing price volatility are putting North American mills under pressure, as is the competitive disadvantage recovered fiber faces against virgin material.
This domestic pressure is helping export markets to gain increasing importance, which is being fed by current strong demand from China, he added.
The advent of single-stream recycling is another factor changing the marketplace, according to Steve Wilson, director of marketing for the fiber group of Waste Management Recycle America, based in Houston. "The domestic industry is not as strong as it used to be," he said, adding that consumption is shrinking while the sources of fiber are changing, with much more material coming from single-stream sources.
Single stream, Wilson said, has increased the volume of material collected, which in turn has lead to an increase in capital investment in facilities to make them capable of handling the influx of material.
According to figures provided by Moore, single-stream processing systems have seen a dramatic increase since 1980, and single stream and dual stream combined dominate today’s MRF processing systems.
The 2007 Paper Recycling Conference & Trade Show will be June 10-12 in Orlando.
(Additional news about paper recycling markets, including breaking news and pricing, is available online at www.RecyclingToday.com.)
UK PAPER COMPANY GOES INTO RECEIVERSHIP
Smith, Anderson & Co. Ltd. has announced that its papermaking facility in Fife, Scotland, has gone into receivership.
The company is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Smith Anderson Group, one of Scotland’s oldest manufacturing companies. The mill is the last paper mill in Scotland that used recovered fiber as a raw material.
In an effort to save the mill, the company closed one of its paper machines last year. However, because of high energy costs, Smith, Anderson & Co. opted to shutter the rest of the facility, which includes closing two remaining paper machines.
The joint receivers are assessing the future of Securecycle, a waste collection and management service that also operates from the site, and hope to sell this part of the business. Securecycle, according to directors of Smith Anderson, has shown good growth and also provides confidential destruction services for the financial and legal industries.
The group’s other subsidiary, Smith Anderson Packaging Ltd., which makes a range of bags for major fast food and other retailers, is not affected by the receivership and will continue trading as normal.
The Smith Anderson Group of companies is made up of the Smith, Anderson & Co. Ltd. division, which manufactures paper and offers recycling, and Smith Anderson Packaging Ltd., which makes bags for retailers.
LINPAC LOOKS TO SELL US PAPER OPERATIONS
Packaging giant Linpac, based in the United Kingdom, has put its U.S. business on the block amid speculation that its private equity owners are considering selling the UK group for £1 billion.
According to the Daily Telegraph, the company has hired investment bank UBS to advise on the sale of Georgia-based Linpac Inc., which specializes in making corrugated paper. The firm could sell for $100 million.
The move to sell the business comes as banking sources say Montagu Private Equity, which owns Linpac, might be looking to streamline the group before selling its UK operations. However, people familiar with the company say Linpac simply did not want to use more capital to increase scale at Linpac Inc., according to the report.
ARIZONA COMMUNITY ADDS SHREDDED PAPER
Residents of Gilbert, Ariz., can now recycle their shredded paper through the city’s curbside recycling program.
According to a report in the Arizona Star, residents must place their shredded paper in a clear plastic bag, which they then can place in their blue recycling bins for curbside pickup.
The city decided to begin accepting the material because of multiple requests from residents, Louis Anderson, Gilbert’s solid waste superintendent, tells the newspaper.
INTERNATIONAL PAPER TO SELL KRAFT PAPERS BUSINESS
International Paper (IP), headquartered in Stamford, Conn., has signed a definitive agreement to sell its kraft papers business to Stone Arcade Acquisition Corp., Northfield, Ill., for about $155 million in cash, subject to certain closing and post-closing adjustments and two payments totaling up to $60 million, payable five years from the close of the transaction, contingent upon business performance.
International Paper’s kraft papers business generated approximately $220 million in sales in 2005 and includes the Roanoke Rapids, N.C., paper mill and the Ride Rite dunnage bag plant in Fordyce, Ark.
The agreement is part of IP’s previously announced transformation plan to focus on uncoated papers and packaging. Proceeds from divestitures announced to date, including kraft papers, total nearly $9.3 billion.
The sale is expected to close in the third quarter of 2006, subject to satisfaction of various closing conditions, including regulatory approval and approval by Stone Arcade shareholders. After closing, the company will be called KapStone Kraft Paper Corp., a division of KapStone Paper and Packaging Corp. Tim Keneally, currently vice president of IP’s kraft papers business, will lead the KapStone Kraft Paper business.
"The acquisition of IP’s kraft papers business is an important first step for our company, Stone Arcade," Roger Stone, chairman and CEO of Stone Arcade, says. "It provides us with a very solid platform from which we hope to expand. We look forward to working with the current management group to develop internal growth opportunities while we simultaneously explore strategic acquisitions," he adds
Stone is a paper industry veteran. He served as the chairman and CEO of Stone Container Corp., which merged with Smurfit Container Corp. in 1998, creating Smurfit-Stone Container.
International Paper’s kraft papers business produces approximately 400,000 tons of kraft papers, used in a variety of end-use products, including approximately 9 million Ride Rite dunnage bags.
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