logo
Province promises more wood heat, wood buildings in wake of Northern Pulp selling off assets

Province promises more wood heat, wood buildings in wake of Northern Pulp selling off assets

Yahoo17-07-2025
Days after Nova Scotia's forestry sector was dealt a major blow, the province is promising to use more wood to heat and construct public buildings — although officials deny any connection between the two developments.
Two cabinet ministers made the announcement Thursday at Ledwidge Lumber, a sawmill in Elmsdale, N.S.
Public Works Minister Fred Tilley said every government department is being directed to look for opportunities to use wood products that are leftover after trees have been harvested and milled for lumber. The products could include mass timber, wood pellets, biomass and biofuels.
Tilley said the move was driven by the province's desire to become more self-reliant, reduce fossil fuel use and produce more locally-made construction materials.
"Local wood products are going to be a big part of our solution," Tilley said.
The announcement came three days after news that officials with Northern Pulp were abandoning plans for a possible new mill and bioproducts hub that would have been constructed near Liverpool around the site of the former Bowater paper mill.
Until its original mill shut down five years ago, Northern Pulp bought up large quantities of low-grade wood products from woodlots across the region. The mill's closure left the industry searching for new markets, and hoping the operators would restart.
Earlier this week, Northern Pulp officials said they had completed a feasibility study of a proposed project in Liverpool, N.S., and found it would not achieve the targeted 14 per cent rate of return.
"This is not in response to the announcement of Northern Pulp," said Natural Resources Minister Tory Rushton.
"This is one of many things that have been in the breadbasket to work on for low-grade wood fibre and our forestry sector. This has been worked on for some time," he said.
The province said it will launch a procurement in the near future to get new wood-fired heating systems for buildings and district heat projects, which are multiple buildings using a shared heating system.
It's also promising to review its policies to ensure wood heat and construction are considered in all projects and that there are no barriers to their use.
Rushton and Tilley could not say how long this work would take or what it could cost.
Doug Ledwidge, the president of Ledwidge Lumber, endorsed the province's efforts, noting the challenge the Canada-U.S. trade dispute has created for his industry. Forest Nova Scotia estimates the industry exports about $600 million of products to the U.S. every year.
"Local is a good place to sell our products," Ledwidge said.
Ledwidge Lumber is working on a new biofuel project that would use shavings, sawdust and pulp chips from its sawmill to create a liquid heating fuel. Ledwidge said he would be "pretty happy" to see the province buy the product for hospitals or schools.
He said it's difficult for the forestry industry to practise ecological forestry — a system adopted by the previous Liberal government — without the market that Northern Pulp provided, but projects such as this help.
"By no means is it the same volume, but it's chipping away at it," said Ledwidge.
Ledwidge Lumber is also a partner in a startup called Mass Timber Company, which is aiming to build a plant in Elmsdale to produce mass timber — an engineered wood product — to be used in building construction.
Patrick Crabbe, Mass Timber Company's president and CEO, said the plant could be built in two to two-and-a-half years. It is still contingent on financing.
He lauded the province's new commitment to wood products, calling it "an exemplary effort."
Court documents shed light on Northern Pulp's plans
Meanwhile, lawyers for Northern Pulp were in a British Columbia courtroom on Thursday where they received approval for a plan to extend creditor protection while preparations continue to auction off the outfit's Nova Scotia assets.
Documents filed as part of that process include the pre-feasibility assessment for the Liverpool project, which ultimately led to the determination the idea was not viable.
According to the document, the project capacity would have struck "a balance between the available wood resources in Nova Scotia and the critical scale needed to be competitive on the pulp markets."
A conventional pulp mill would have a rate of return below six per cent, according to the document. Northern Pulp said a new project needed to generate a rate of return of 14 per cent.
"Instead, the Liverpool Project would need to monetize the full value of fibre and become a state-of-the-art biorefinery producing pulp, electricity, biochemical byproducts and capture carbon," reads the document.
The price tag would have been $3.7 billion and that would not have been enough to reach the 14 per cent rate of return, according to the report.
The project would have been a "first-of-a-kind for Canada and the rest of the world."
"Furthermore, recent developments in global pulp markets point to a prolonged downcycle risk that would make the assumed selling price in the financial model unattainable, at least for the first years after the potential commissioning."
Of Northern Pulp's assets in this province, perhaps the most significant is almost 200,000 hectares of timberlands.
MORE TOP STORIES
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brookfield, Birch Hill Snag Canadian Mortgage Firm in $2.1 Billion Deal
Brookfield, Birch Hill Snag Canadian Mortgage Firm in $2.1 Billion Deal

Bloomberg

time2 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Brookfield, Birch Hill Snag Canadian Mortgage Firm in $2.1 Billion Deal

Brookfield Asset Management and a private equity partner reached a friendly deal to take over First National Financial Corp., a mortgage company backed by Canadian billionaire Stephen Smith, for about C$2.9 billion ($2.1 billion). Funds managed by Brookfield and Toronto-based Birch Hill Equity Partners Management Inc. agreed to pay C$48 a share in cash for First National, an originator of commercial and residential mortgages. That's a 13% premium to where the shares closed Friday.

State of play in Trump's tariffs, threats and delays
State of play in Trump's tariffs, threats and delays

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

State of play in Trump's tariffs, threats and delays

Dozens of economies including India, Canada and Mexico face threats of higher tariffs Friday if they fail to strike deals with Washington. Here is a summary of duties President Donald Trump has introduced in his second term as he pressures allies and competitors alike to reshape US trade relationships. - Global tariffs - US "reciprocal" tariffs -- imposed under legally contentious emergency powers -- are due to jump from 10 percent to various steeper levels for a list of dozens of economies come August 1, including South Korea, India and Taiwan. The hikes were to take effect July 9 but Trump postponed them days before imposition, marking a second delay since their shock unveiling in April. A 10 percent "baseline" levy on most partners, which Trump imposed in April, remains in place. He has also issued letters dictating tariff rates above 10 percent for individual countries, including Brazil, which has a trade deficit with the United States and was not on the initial list of higher "reciprocal" rates. Several economies -- the European Union, Britain, Vietnam, Japan, Indonesia and the Philippines -- have struck initial tariff deals with Washington, while China managed to temporarily lower tit-for-tat duties. Certain products like pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber are excluded from Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs, but may face separate action under different authorities. This has been the case for steel, aluminum, and soon copper. Gold and silver, alongside energy commodities, are also exempted. Excluded too are Mexico and Canada, hit with a different set of tariffs, and countries like Russia and North Korea as they already face sanctions. - Canada, Mexico - Canadian and Mexican products were hit by 25 percent US tariffs shortly after Trump returned to office, with a lower rate for Canadian energy. Trump targeted both neighbors over illegal immigration and fentanyl trafficking, also invoking emergency powers. But trade negotiations have been bumpy. This month, Trump said Canadian goods will face a higher 35 percent duty from August 1, and Mexican goods will see a 30 percent level. Products entering the United States under the USMCA North American free trade pact, covering large swaths of goods, are expected to remain exempt -- with Canadian energy resources and potash, used as fertilizer, to still face lower rates. - China focus - Trump has also taken special aim at China. The world's two biggest economies engaged in an escalating tariffs war this year before their temporary pullback. The countries imposed triple-digit duties on each other at one point, a level described as a trade embargo. After high level talks, Washington lowered its levies on Chinese goods to 30 percent and Beijing slashed its own to 10 percent. This pause is set to expire August 12, and officials will meet for further talks on Monday and Tuesday in the Swedish capital Stockholm. The US level is higher as it includes a 20 percent tariff over China's alleged role in the global fentanyl trade. Beyond expansive tariffs on Chinese products, Trump ordered the closure of a duty-free exemption for low-value parcels from the country. This adds to the cost of importing items like clothing and small electronics. - Autos, metals - Trump has targeted individual business sectors too, under more conventional national security grounds, imposing a 25 percent levy on steel and aluminum imports which he later doubled to 50 percent. The president has unveiled plans for a 50 percent tariff on copper imports starting August 1 as well and rolled out a 25 percent tariff on imported autos, although those entering under the USMCA can qualify for a lower rate. Trump's auto tariffs impact vehicle parts too, but new rules ensure automakers paying vehicle tariffs will not also be charged for certain other duties. He has ongoing investigations into imports of lumber, semiconductors, pharmaceuticals and critical minerals that could trigger further duties. - Legal challenges - Several legal challenges have been filed against the tariffs Trump invoked citing emergencies. The US Court of International Trade ruled in May that the president had overstepped his authority, but a federal appeals court has allowed the duties to remain while it considers the case. If these tariffs are ultimately ruled illegal, companies could possibly seek reimbursements. bys/des/mlm Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store