Logout
Click here for Pulp & Paper Radio International
The Paperitalo Library
Free Downloads
Search
My Profile
Login
Södra to invest in bark-based tanning agent production at Varo mill in Sweden
Print

SWEDEN (News release) -- Södra is investing in a production line at Värö which will create a vegetable tanning agent from bark. This new tannin can be used to process leather in a more environmentally friendly way. Scheduled to be commissioned in 2026, the plant will have the capacity to produce tannins for millions of square metres of leather.

Södra's Board of Directors has approved the project which will be an integral part of the Värö mill and is expected to be able to produce tanning material equivalent to millions of square metres of leather.

"This investment decision fits well with our overall ambition to increase the added value from every tree and thus contribute to the profitability of our members' forest estates," explains Lotta Lyrå, CEO of Södra. Developing more environmentally friendly alternatives by making additional products from the forest is an excellent example of how we use our experience, knowledge and innovation expertise to make the most of the forest's resources.

Since 2006, Södra Innovation, a business area within the member-owned forest group, Södra, has been exploring how tannins found in the bark of trees can be efficiently processed and used as tanning agents. Using bark for tanning is not new, but Södra is now industrialising the process in which the tanning substance is leached from the bark and turned into a product for tanning leather.

"With this new patented process, we can now make a product from an, until now, unused resource. A product that can be used in a completely different industry and support the leather industry in its transition to more sustainable tanning methods," says Catrin Gustavsson, Business Area Manager at Södra Innovation.

SAINT JOHN, NEW BRUNSWICK (News release) - Irving Pulp & Paper, Limited has submitted a preliminary application to undertake a major upgrade to Saint John's westside pulp mill, representing a new long-term capital improvement plan and a potential $1.1-billion investment.

Known as NextGen, the project will increase the mill's capacity while also increasing the green energy it generates, making it one of the top producing kraft pulp mills in the world and a global leader in environmental performance. An Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) related to the project has been submitted to New Brunswick's Department of Environment. ​

"These upgrades will ensure Saint John's pulp mill continues to be at the heart of the province's forest products supply chain, and provides a regional market for chips, bark and pulpwood," said Irving Pulp & Paper Vice President, Mark Mosher.

At the heart of the project is the construction of a new recovery boiler to replace the 1970s-era boiler. This project will increase production by approximately 66 per cent and facilitate several new environmental upgrades to the historic mill including: ​

  • A new turbine and green energy generator which will help decarbonize New Brunswick's electrical grid,
  • Technological improvements to re-use water and reduce the mill's water consumption,​
  • Decommissioning an oil-fired boiler which will reduce the CO2 emitted from the mill.​

During the four-year construction phase, the $1.1-billion capital investment project will: ​

  • Generate over $172 million in tax revenue for provincial and local governments during the construction phase; ​
  • Generate $539 million in employment income and create more than 2,200 person years of employment; ​
  • Boost provincial GDP by $711 million; ​
  • Generate $409 million in household spending and generate opportunities for hundreds of local contractors. ​

This investment follows several major capital projects at the mill over the last 10 years, including a new $150-million Environmental Treatment Facility and a $500-million modernization plan which involved the construction of a new chip handling system, digester and pulp dryer announced in 2014.

Wood chip production facility

A new wood chip production facility is being proposed on the site of the Bald Mountain Rock Quarry, in west Saint John. J.D. Irving, Limited is proposing to repurpose part of the property for this project, which is the subject of a separate EIA being filed concurrently with the provincial Department of Environment. The Bald Mountain Rock Quarry site is close to the mill and will eventually cease quarry operations as the site transitions to a wood chip facility.

This project will reduce carbon emissions and reduce costs associated with more efficient chip deliveries. Refurbishment and extension of the site's rail capability will enable pulpwood to be received at the site via rail. ​

An open house for both projects will be held to provide information to nearby residents.

To register for the open house or find more information about these projects, please visit Homepage | JD Irving Projects

SWEDEN (News release) -- Södra is investing in a production line at Värö which will create a vegetable tanning agent from bark. This new tannin can be used to process leather in a more environmentally friendly way. Scheduled to be commissioned in 2026, the plant will have the capacity to produce tannins for millions of square metres of leather.

Södra's Board of Directors has approved the project which will be an integral part of the Värö mill and is expected to be able to produce tanning material equivalent to millions of square metres of leather.

"This investment decision fits well with our overall ambition to increase the added value from every tree and thus contribute to the profitability of our members' forest estates," explains Lotta Lyrå, CEO of Södra. Developing more environmentally friendly alternatives by making additional products from the forest is an excellent example of how we use our experience, knowledge and innovation expertise to make the most of the forest's resources.

Since 2006, Södra Innovation, a business area within the member-owned forest group, Södra, has been exploring how tannins found in the bark of trees can be efficiently processed and used as tanning agents. Using bark for tanning is not new, but Södra is now industrialising the process in which the tanning substance is leached from the bark and turned into a product for tanning leather.

"With this new patented process, we can now make a product from an, until now, unused resource. A product that can be used in a completely different industry and support the leather industry in its transition to more sustainable tanning methods," says Catrin Gustavsson, Business Area Manager at Södra Innovation.

Are your products listed in the Paperitalo Supplier Directory? If not, click here.

 

Related Articles:


Powered by Bondware
News Publishing Software

The browser you are using is outdated!

You may not be getting all you can out of your browsing experience
and may be open to security risks!

Consider upgrading to the latest version of your browser or choose on below: