Power has now been fully restored to the facility, and one of the plant's two production lines resumed operation at normal rates on Sunday (February 19). The second line resumed normal operation yesterday, February 22.
Buckeye Chairman and CEO John B. Crowe said that ‘while this is an unfortunate event, I appreciate the efforts of our employees and contractors with a rapid and around-the-clock effort to return the plant to normal operations. Resources have performed in a safe manner to identify the damaged equipment and make the necessary repairs. We are working with all of our customers and anticipate no major customer issues from this event. The Foley Plant remains in a sold out position and we believe current inventory levels are adequate to cover the production losses for the near term. Our highest priority is to safely return the plant to full operation."
The company indicated that it currently is unable to fully quantify the financial impact of the event. However, depending on the timing of returning to full production, it estimates that the financial impact of the outage, excluding the effect of any insurance proceeds, could be in the range of a $5 to $6 million reduction in pretax operating income, most of which would impact the quarter ending March 31.The company reported that it has property loss and business interruption insurance with a single $2 million deductible and believes, based on discussions with its insurance broker, that this event is a covered loss.
Buckeye operates facilities in the U.S., Germany, and Canada.
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