Consumables
NewPage Announces Integration Restructuring Plans
Thursday 17. January 2008 - NewPage Corporation announced today key steps being taken to integrate NewPage and the former Stora Enso North America (SENA) facilities and services.
“NewPage is combining its business with SENA with the vision of becoming the best printing paper company in North America,” said Mark A. Suwyn, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of NewPage. “These restructuring decisions will create the platform essential to become one company, remain competitive in the marketplace, serve our customers more efficiently and reach $265 million of synergies we have committed to achieve. Despite the permanent closures being announced today, we are merging the operations in a manner that will actually increase our 2008 North American production by 3-8% compared to the combined production in 2007.”
“At NewPage, we remain committed to our customers and we will continue to offer a broad portfolio of printing papers such as coated freesheet, lightweight coated groundwood, supercalendered paper and specialty products to meet a wide variety of needs,” said Rick Willett, president and chief operating officer. “We believe our customers will benefit from our closing slower, lower volume, less strategic machines and moving affected grades to machines that can manufacture them most efficiently, yielding a higher quality, more consistent product. Closing one of our converting facilities and transitioning sheeting operations will result in better geographical distribution, more capacity for sheets, faster turnaround and delivery times for custom sizes, and a wider range of sheet sizes.”
The specific restructuring actions are as follows:
— Permanently close the No. 11 paper machine in Rumford, Maine, which
produces coated freesheet and groundwood papers for magazines and
catalogs, by the end of February 2008. Approximately 60 employees will
be affected by the shutdown.
— Permanently close the pulp mill and two paper machines, Nos. 43 and 44,
in Niagara, Wisconsin, by the end of April 2008. The Niagara machines
produce 230,000 tons of lightweight coated groundwood papers used in
magazines and catalogs. Approximately 319 employees will be affected
by the shutdown.
— Permanently close the No. 95 paper machine in Kimberly, Wisconsin, by
the end of May 2008. The Kimberly mill produces coated freesheet
papers for publication printing, and specialty papers for pressure-
sensitive or glue-applied labels. Approximately 125 employees will be
affected.
— Permanently close the Chillicothe, Ohio, converting facility by the end
of November 2008 after some of the converting machines and volume are
transferred to existing facilities in Luke, Maryland, and Wisconsin
Rapids, Wisconsin. Approximately 160 employees will be affected.
Products produced on the closed machines will be transitioned to more efficient paper machines within the company’s integrated mill system. “In addition to the changes to these operations and their employees, we are also informing personnel in all areas of the company such as sales, finance and other support functions of the longer term plans for their departments,” added Suwyn. NewPage is taking appropriate actions to assist the affected employees with new opportunities or benefits packages.
“These actions come from an extensive integration plan developed by a group of nearly 50 people from both companies and represent all the significant actions we expect to take to combine the two operations. We do not anticipate any further steps related to the integration,” said Willett. “Right now the market is strong and we do not anticipate taking any market- related downtime which would be separate from these actions.”