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 Mill to be fired only by plantation timber 

Mill to be fired only by plantation timber

07 Jan, 2010 08:35 AM
UP TO one million tonnes of pulpwood a year could be shipped to Bell Bay from Victoria after Gunns announced yesterday that its controversial pulp mill would operate totally on plantation timber.

In an Australian Securities Exchange statement the Launceston-based timber company said the pulpwood would come from managed investment scheme plantations formerly controlled by Great Southern.

Gunns this week completed the acquisition of the failed investment company's timber resource, which includes more than 40,000 hectares in the Green Triangle area of Victoria and South Australia.

Gunns is building new port loading facilities at Portland in western Victoria.

Its Bell Bay pulp mill was originally to use all Tasmanian timber, with 60 per cent coming from plantations and 40 per cent from native forests. It said that after five years the mill would move to 80 per cent plantation timber.

Yesterday's announcement meets one of the key requirements of Swedish company Sodra, which is widely tipped to be Gunns preferred equity partner for the controversial $2.5 billion project.

Sodra said in June it would only become involved if the Tasmanian mill used all plantation timber and was chlorine free. The mill has been designed to be only partially chlorine free.

Gunns chairman John Gay told the ASX that discussions with equity partners and bankers for the mill were "continuing positively".

"The Bell Bay mill has always been planned and designed as a plantation-based mill.

"However, with Gunns' existing resources, it was not possible for Gunns to guarantee supply to the mill of 100 per cent plantation timber until five years after commencement of mill operations," Mr Gay said.

"Securing the Great Southern resource is an exciting new development for Gunns that allows us to accelerate our plantation strategy to supply the Bell Bay mill with 100 per cent plantation from mill start-up."

Mr Gay said the move to 100 per cent plantation timber would make the Bell Bay mill consistent with other bleached kraft pulp mills in South America and "should mitigate any concerns of stakeholders regarding fibre supply to the Bell Bay mill".

Both the State Government and Liberals welcomed the announcement.

The Tasmanian Greens and The Wilderness Society and lobby group Our Common Ground said more needed to be done to protect Tasmania's native forests.

Wilderness Society pulp mill campaigner Paul Oosting called on Gunns to renegotiate the pulp mill wood supply deal with Forestry Tasmania to exclude any native forest woodchips.

Gunns has said the pulp mill could be expected to consume more than four million tonnes of pulpwood a year to produce about one million tonnes of paper pulp.

The company says its Green Triangle resource is expected to generate an annual woodflow of up to one million green metric tonnes a year.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Past-Chief Scientist, Jim Peacock, did voice concerns regarding 72 swimming pools per day of dioxin-contaminated effluent staying predominantly within 5km of the Tas coastline i.e. outside his Commonwealth waters area of consideration to which I think his "environmentally neutral" overall summary conclusion actually referred. It's the State assessment where the bogies lie ant that assessment was fast-tracked for what seem now to have been very spurious reasons, especially in light of revelations of what the RPDC thought of the proposal immediately prior to it being yanked away from their consideration, i.e. that it was critically non-compliant with the guidelines, particularly with regard to fugitive odour emissions lingering in the Tamar just like the present bushfire smoke from the York Town fire.
Posted by Glen Baldrick, 7/01/2010 10:39:42 AM, on The Examiner
While plantation timber may be used for a pulp mill, Gunns are still in the woodchip business so will they still be harvesting old growth timber for woodchips?
Posted by EBee, Invermay, 7/01/2010 12:46:25 PM, on The Examiner
Actually, that Chief Scientists report makes no mention at all of "72 swimming pools of dioxin contaminated effluent". These are hardly the words of an emminent and respected Australian Scientist. Sure there are some residual precautionary concerns raised in the report - as you would expect from a Panel of experts charged with the protection of the Commonwealth marine environment as well as listed and migratory species occurring outside that environment. But the report also says such concerns could readily be addressed by Gunns via the preparation of Environmental Management Plan(s) approved by the Minister acting on advice of both Government & independent experts. We know that most of those Management Plans have now been approved by the Minister. However, some work remains outstanding, notably the results of more detailed hydrodynamic modelling designed to inform us all on the dispersion characteristics and potential impacts of the pulp mill effluent. We should wait and see how that work pans out and in the meantime refrain from making outrageous, exaggerated statements. Such statements serve to inflame rather than inform the debate.
Posted by Harry, 7/01/2010 4:28:34 PM, on The Examiner
The problem, Harry, is that Gunns drafted, and recommended to the Commonwealth, the parameters they thought were achievable and acceptable for the hydrodynamic modeling. Gunns wouldn't set the bar too high, and these are undoubtably biased and self-serving recommendations. How indeed did Gunns get away with that one? Whilst we're on the topic of Gunns political interference, how did they manage to draft, and then have enacted, the Pulp Mill Assessment Act? How did they get away with Section 11? Our politicians must have been 'tired' that night! What other company in Tasmania's history has been given such 'unique' free-reign? What other company in Australian history? This level of interference and political manipulation is why Gunns will always be mistrusted, and why the mill will NEVER have social support. Just like the environment, Gunns have trashed Tasmanian politics. I seriously look forward to Labour being routed in March's election.
Posted by Steven Jurgeit, 7/01/2010 6:37:06 PM, on The Examiner

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John Gay
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