At a ceremony last week in North Carolina, Gov. Bev Perdue announced that Clearwater Paper Corp., Spokane, Wash., USA, has chosen Shelby as the location to build its newest tissue facility. The company had previously announced the project, which includes a Through-Air-Dried (TAD) paper machine and seven converting lines capable of producing ultra grades of private label tissue products.
"After nearly a year of analysis—looking at important aspects such as current customer base and growth opportunities, logistics, and transportation infrastructure, available workforce skills and abilities, tax structure, incentives and quality of life, and subject to local and state incentives being granted, Clearwater Paper has chosen Shelby to be the home of our newest tissue facility," said Gordon Jones, chairman, president and CEO of Clearwater Paper. "From the Governor to the Department of Commerce to Cleveland County's economic development team, we found North Carolina to be not only very responsive to our company's business needs, but endowed with a dedicated, positive group of people who are a pleasure to work with."
Clearwater Paper intends to move forward as soon as possible with construction of the facility, which will include a 200-in. TAD tissue machine together with a total of seven converting lines, and has estimated the project will cost $260 million to $280 million. Over the next 12 years, state and local incentives associated with the project are expected to be worth nearly $50 million in the aggregate.
"The Shelby facility will increase our ultra and premium offerings to our existing Southern and East Coast customers," said Bob DeVleming, VP, consumer products division. "We believe it will also create new opportunities to expand our private label consumer tissue business to other retail grocery chains in the region, and we are very pleased with the initial work by North Carolina officials. We are ready to get started."
The company intends to break ground during the third quarter of this year. Build-out and startup for the converting lines will come in phases, with the first two lines expected to begin production during the second half of 2011. The paper machine is expected to take two years to build from completion of engineering, and the company anticipates beginning production on the machine in the second half of 2012. At full production capacity, the facility will produce approximately 10 million cases or 70,000 tons of bathroom tissue and household towels annually.
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