CalAg Rice MDF Plant Is A Go
The CalAg rice straw-based medium density fiberboard plant is becoming a reality. CalPlant I, as it is called, has completed and closed financing for a $315 million plant to be built in Willows, Calif. with a production capacity of 140MMSF (3/4 in. basis) and a startup goal of late 2018.
The project has been in the works for more than 20 years, since the principals first shipped California grown rice straw to England for testing. Since then, the endeavor experienced a series of “almosts,” until the recent successful financing, which includes $228 million of tax-exempt private activity revenue bonds priced through the California Pollution Control Financing Authority, and $87 million cash equity.
A group of minority investors includes a subsidiary of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America, Columbia Forest Products, the German-based machinery manufacturer Siempelkamp, CalAg LLC and a range of other investors.
The project stems from state legislation in 1991 that prohibited farmers from burning rice straw, the waste product of rice harvesting. Smoky haze had become an issue in the region.
CalAg President Jerry Uhland, a rice farmer, joined a small venture formed by another agriculture man, Jim Boyd, in 1996 that began researching rice straw-based MDF. They were soon joined by Les Younie, who had worked in wood products operations, and who today remains Vice President of Manufacturing.
The project is expected to bring several environmental advantages including water use reduction, methane emissions reduction, fungicide and chemicals reduction. And obviously it provides a new recycling market for roughly 275,000 tons of rice straw annually.
Latest News
2021 Will Go Down As One Busy Year
Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing December 2021 – As the year winds down, we once again take a quick look back through it. Needless to say, everything that happened rode on the dark wings of the pandemic…
Sawmill Industry Is Still In A Sprint
Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing November 2021 – The numbing noise of nothingness. I’m referring to those times in the lumber market cycle when profits don’t exist and pessimism takes hold. Anybody in the lumber industry who has some age on them has…
BC Plans Rankles Industry
Susan Yurkovich, President and CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries, says the British Columbia Government’s apparent intention to defer 2.6 million hectares of old-growth across British Columbia will have a “profound and devastating impact on people, families and communities across the province…
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.