Nip Impressions logo
Sat, Dec 14, 2024 01:09
Visitor
Home
Click here for Pulp & Paper Radio International
Subscription Central
Must reads for pulp and paper industry professionals
Search
My Profile
Login
Logout
Management Side
Paper Excellence Canada and Nova Scotia reach settlement, Pictou mill will not reopen

CANADA (News release) -- Paper Excellence Canada announced that it has reached a settlement with the Province of Nova Scotia, Canada, that acknowledges plans to transform and reopen Northern Pulp Nova Scotia in Pictou will not proceed and provides for a review process agreed between the Northern Pulp group and the Province of Nova Scotia that is aimed to determine whether a new, modern mill in Nova Scotia is viable. The agreement also provides for the settlement of outstanding litigation and loans between the two parties and fully addresses the pensions of former mill employees.

The settlement agreement is subject to approval by the Supreme Court of British Columbia.

Feasibility study for a new, modern mill
Central to the settlement agreement is the creation by the Northern Pulp group (a subsidiary of the Paper Excellence group) and the Province of Nova Scotia of a review process that will explore the feasibility of a new, modern mill in Liverpool, Nova Scotia. Paper Excellence Canada will fund this review process and will work in close consultation with the Province of Nova Scotia in undertaking a feasibility study to determine whether a viable business case exists to open a new mill there.

The potential construction of a state-of-the-art Northern Bleached Softwood Kraft (NBSK) pulp mill therefore depends on a determination of viability under this study.

If a new mill is viable, the Northern Pulp group will seek third-party project financing to design, construct, and operate it. Northern Pulp will also pay the province $15 million to fully resolve previous woodlands-related debt and will continue to own the woodlands.

If a new mill is not feasible, the Northern Pulp group's assets in Nova Scotia will be sold in a managed process. The proceeds from the sale will be used to repay the debtor-in-possession financing incurred throughout Northern Pulp's CCAA process, fund and wind-up pension plans and contribute to cleanup costs. Any funds remaining will go to the province to repay the debts owed to it.

Pictou site to be maintained for potential logistics operations
Paper Excellence's plans to transform and reopen Northern Pulp Nova Scotia will not proceed. Instead, the focus will shift to maintaining the site for potential future woodland logistics operations, conditional upon establishing a new mill elsewhere in Nova Scotia.

The Pictou site will remain in cold hibernation during the feasibility study. Northern Pulp Nova Scotia will continue to comply with its obligations under the existing ministerial order, environmental laws, and regulations and provide ongoing care and maintenance of the site.

Northern Pulp Nova Scotia will remain in CCAA for as long as necessary to achieve the settlement's objectives.

Former employee pensions to be fully funded
Regardless of the feasibility study results, outstanding pensions of current and former Northern Pulp Nova Scotia employees will be fully funded, and pension obligations will be fully discharged.

Withdrawal of litigation and settlement of debts
To resolve all outstanding legal claims, Paper Excellence will withdraw its lawsuit against the province and settle debts under the terms of the settlement agreement. This resolution clears the path for a collaborative future between Paper Excellence and the Province of Nova Scotia.

The request for approval of the settlement agreement will be heard in the British Columbia Supreme Court on May 31, 2024.

Paper Excellence Canada, headquartered in British Columbia, is a diversified manufacturer of pulp and specialty, printing, writing, and packaging papers in Canada with a production capacity of over 2.5 million tonnes annually and a workforce of more than 2,100.

Are your products listed in the Paperitalo Supplier Directory? If not, click here.


Printer-friendly format

 





Powered by Bondware
News Publishing Software

The browser you are using is outdated!

You may not be getting all you can out of your browsing experience
and may be open to security risks!

Consider upgrading to the latest version of your browser or choose on below: