Header: Header: Header:

2013 Uplifting, Brighter 2014

Article by Jessica Johnson, Associate Editor, Timber Processing

What a year 2013 turned out to be! As one of the “new kids on the block” in sawmilling, I definitely found this year to be an interesting one. I’ll spare the details of my first southern yellow pine mill experience; let’s just say that I think mill management spent a lot of time giving each other the “did-she-really-just-ask-that-question” look. But as I worked alongside veteran editors Rich Donnell and Dan Shell and made my way into a few mills on my own, I realized how positive this industry is about the future.

The year 2012 had been good for mills as homebuilding jumped, mills added shifts and began spending money on equipment. This year witnessed a continuation of those trends thanks to solid pricing and more homebuilding.

TP’s annual capital expenditure survey reported that 51% of sawmills plan to invest $1 million or more in the next three years. However, as Editor-in-Chief Donnell said around this time last year, “caution” might never leave our economic forecasts, given how deep the recession was felt in 2008. As we say goodbye to 2013, let’s look at some of the more memorable moments and noteworthy developments.

 

  • Timber Processing named Finley McRae of Rex Lumber as its 25th Man of the Year.
  • Harley Langdale, Jr., one of the major drivers of the longstanding Valdosta, Ga.-based The Langdale Companies, died in February. He was 98.
  • Interfor purchased Keadle Lumber of Thomastown, Ga.
  • Austrian company Klausner finalized the purchase of 155 acres of property in Live Oak, Fla. for a major sawmill facility, and planned at least one, if not two, more in the South.
  • Blue Wolf Capital, a New York-based private equity firm, purchased Suwannee Lumber of Florida.
  • Sawmiller extraordinaire Maine’s J. Paul Levesque died in July at age 82.
  • International Paper sold Temple-Inland Building Products Div. to Georgia-Pacific Building Products, LLC for $710 million.
  • Hankins Lumber Co. in Grenada, Miss. reopened its southern yellow pine facility after a 15-month closure.
  • The International Paper sawmill in Franklin, Va., which had been closed since 2009, was purchased by Franklin Lumber, LLC, a new company composed of former employees of the mill.
  • Canadian based Canfor Corp. purchased Alabama-based Scotch Gulf Lumber and three sawmills in a three-year phased-in transaction for $80 million; meanwhile Gulf Lumber principal Sandy Stimpson became the Mayor of Mobile, Ala.
  • Plum Creek Timber purchased 500,000 acres of timberland from MeadWestvaco.

Latest News

Interfor Is Purchasing WestRock Summerville Sawmill

Interfor is acquiring the WestRock sawmill in Summerville, SC for US$59 million. The Summerville mill produced 125MMBF in 2020. A new permit was received in 2020 that allows for the production of up to 200MMBF and Interfor has identified a number of operational and capital investment initiatives to optimize and…

Drax Purchase Alters Biomass Landscape

Drax Group, the major United Kingdom-based electricity producer, which has converted much of its generation from coal-fired to wood pellet fuel, has entered into an agreement to purchase major Canadian-based industrial wood pellet producer Pinnacle Renewable Energy Inc. The all-cash transaction…

Harrigan Plans For USNR Trimmer Line

Harrigan Lumber in Monroeville, Ala. is investing in a sawmill trimmer line from USNR to ramp up its production. Harrigan’s operation is a southern yellow pine dimensional lumber mill, and the new trimmer line is…

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.