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 Pulp mill site cleared and awaits finance 

Pulp mill site cleared and awaits finance

18 Aug, 2010 09:53 AM
GUNNS' Bell Bay pulp mill site is cleared and ready for earthworks to start, says the company's corporate relations and sustainability manager Calton Frame.

"Construction-wise, we are as ready as we can be to start building," he said yesterday.

Mr Frame said that, operationally, the massive project was also nearly ready to go.

"The hydrodynamic modelling is one of the last major milestones to be completed," he said.

"That has required ocean testing, testing the waves and currents in Bass Strait to get 12 months worth of data and then have it modelled.

"We have up until March next year to complete it and that is on schedule."

But Mr Frame said that a start on the proposed mill was still contingent on finance.

It was also expected that construction would take at least two years to complete once that was locked in.

He said that news of pulp markets opening up again in Japan after the global financial crisis was good news but the company still had to get the mill to operational stage before it started worrying too much about markets.

"We don't want to get too far ahead of ourselves," he said.

Mr Frame said that 90 hectares of the 600-hectare site, at Bell Bay, had been cleared for the pulp mill.

"There are a number of reserve areas and buffer areas but you can clearly see the footprint of the mill now."

The road to the proposed pulp mill will not feed directly off the East Tamar Highway, but from the company's existing road to its Long Reach woodchip mill.

"There will be no access from the highway - that's all part of the permit process to minimise access points on the highway for safety reasons," Mr Frame said.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
This sounds typical of the way Gunns think. Spend all that money and 2 years building this huge monstrosity and then worry about whether you can find a market for your product!!!
Posted by Sue, 18/08/2010 10:39:46 AM, on The Examiner
Pie in the sky? Federal approval for operation of the mill has not yet been given. At this stage the Federal government has no adequate information to properly consider the effect of poisons to be pumped into Bass Strait. We all know that the State and Federal government want this mill as it is a "cash milking cow", but there are many reasons why it should not be permitted. Residents of the Tamar Valley and elsewhere are hoping that the environmental decison shall be one of "no pulpmill".
Posted by brian, 18/08/2010 10:51:07 AM, on The Examiner
It would take a very brave (or stupid) financier to back this white elephant. Has anyone noticed the chief architects of this plan have jumped ship? A look at the balance sheet tells the sad story. How much longer is this doomed project going to distract and damn Gunns? If ever there was a time for shareholders to call an extraordinary general meeting it would be about now.
Posted by Erika Ford, 18/08/2010 11:55:40 AM, on The Examiner
All Pigs fueled and ready to fly. Another rubbish announcement from the most destructive and divisive company in Australia. "the company still had to get the mill to operational stage before it started worrying too much about markets" well that says it all really - It means lets go and spend $2b on an environmental nightmare that will destroy every other business in the Tamar valley, then see if we can get a market for our product. Gunns care nothing for the people of the Tamar and if they try and build this stinking mill in this totally inappropriate place just because its the cheap option for them. then the Franklin dam protests will look like the Teddy Bears Picnic compared to the reaction they will get. It;'s a disgrace that the state govt allows them to try to do this. Until Tasmania stops this mill and addresses the corruption surrounding it, we will remain a basket case.
Posted by Pro Tasmanian, 18/08/2010 12:06:19 PM, on The Examiner
Just how big is this monstrosity going to be. The picture shows a huge area cleared, 90 hectares but this fades into insignificance when you realise that 600 hectares are required. How about showing a picture of just how big this place is going to be, instead of the artists impression that is now being shown which would only cover the 90 hectares that have been cleared. Once again the facts are different to what we have been told. This whole sorry saga has been smoke and mirrors to fool the gullible.
Posted by max, 18/08/2010 12:28:03 PM, on The Examiner
It is nice of them to clear the land. Someone can start putting crops in soon. Apples or spuds perhaps? There will never be a pulp mill there.
Posted by w b, 18/08/2010 12:40:34 PM, on The Examiner
See all that cleared area?Imagine windmills built on it,and spreading out to sea.Green vision for Tasmania.Hypocrites! Travel to Indonesia,see how the orangutans are treated by the men felling their habitats to build palm oil crops for bio fuel,along with the logging companies clearing for wood chips. Green vision for the world. Notice all the business investment going on in Tasmania? The word is out. Don't travel to Tasmania,the water is poisoned,the soil is poisoned,the air is polluted. Don't invest in Tasmania.too backward to allow progress. Last person to leave turn the light off,or blow out the candle.
Posted by Noelene, 18/08/2010 7:00:58 PM, on The Examiner

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An aerial view of the cleared Bell Bay site on which Gunns intends to build its pulp mill. Picture: PAUL SCAMBLER
An aerial view of the cleared Bell Bay site on which Gunns intends to build its pulp mill. Picture: PAUL SCAMBLER

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