Wood Based Panels International
E-mail Updates
RSS


>
*LP sales of wood products up 9% *Sonae reduces loss in first quarter *India to promote responsible forest management *Wood products industry leaders take to Capitol Hill *Formaldehyde-free panel products *FMC China 2012 to run with FMC Premium *Ainsworth reports higher OSB volumes and prices *Ligna 2013 to focus on skilled worker shortage *Latin American panel producer explores modified wood panels *Premier buys Ireland-based Brooks Group *Thermopal sets strict standards in formaldehyde emissions *ORIS OSB project chooses Carmanah *GKD expands global presence by opening subsidiary in India *Xylexpo below par proves a disappointment *New Moralt business emerges with Anglo-German support *Norbord's North American operations overtake European divisions *Parquet markets present polarised picture *Weyerhaeuser reduces wood product division losses *Second OSB plant for Dieffenbacher in China *Latvijas Finieris celebrates 20th anniversary *Istanbul woodfibre conference with field trips *UKFPA appoints Hazel Newman *Indian plywood conference and a Golden Jubilee *Siempelkamp comes to the rescue of Pallmann *Berneck starts board production on second MDF plant at Curitibanos *Dieffenbacher to design new pellet plant *Masisa to acquire resin production assets from Arclin *Pöyry to publish investor report on Asia Pacific panel and surfacing industry *US demand for siding to exceed 960 million m2 in 2016 *Teknos first to offer 12 year coating warranty for Medite Tricoya *Wood pellets exports from US and Canada to Europe reach record high *Norbord goes live with new UK website *GP and Sherwood Lumber enter engineered wood products distribution agreement *Schelling’s interaction of saws and storage raises productivity and lowers costs *New marketing manager for Coillte Panel Products *Weyerhaeuser engineered wood business grows *Wood fibre flooring and panels suspended *Canada Wood gets behind Wood Awards *Masisa invests US$40m at sites in south east of Brazil *Arauco to raise low pressure panel laminating capacity in Brazil by 50% *Pfleiderer profits grow as parent company files for insolvency *Masisa plant closures and re-modernisation *Homag sales rise but group still records net loss *Arauco and Unilin link up in flooring deal in Brazil *Entrepreneurs spearhead project to build MDF plant *Hans Theodor Pfleiderer relinquishes posiktion on superviksory board *Egger invests in new continuous laminate press *Speciality oil lfor continous fibreboard presses *Interprint wins prestigious award *Mathias Fischer becomes sales director of GreCon *OSB campaign is JOSB well done, says Norbord *First melamine embossing line *Reeta Kaukiainen joins Metsä Group *Joint development between BASF and Finsa *BASF increases its prices for resins and dispersions *Chris Sutton to chairman TTF NPPD *Metso orders pour in for fibreboard industry *Everything you need to know about SEWP *Arauco halts MDP production in Curitiba *Third Coe dryer for Martco plywood plant at Chopin *Successful 2011 for Dieffenbacher Group *Dates for GreCon seminars *Floraplac to install new thin fibreboard production line *Italian woodworking machinery has positive 2011 *AWC statement on Obama’s biobased product procurement memorandum *Potlatch names Eic J Cremers as executive vice president and cfo *TTF engineered wood products division has first meeting *German ZOW attracts 17,500 visitors *Kronospan spends £5.5m on UK embossing first *It’s another “tough year” for LP *Latvian plywood mill hit by fire *Biggest orders yet for Raute from Chile *Weyerhaeuser predicts better wood products performance *Metsäliitto predicts challenging wood products outlook *Canfor ceo writes new blog *Surface Design Show to feature awards scheme *FSC terminates Asia Plywood licence *Steico launches loft panel product *Sonae plant gets hit by fire again *MSc Timber Engineering course at Edinburgh Napier Univeristy *Second Wood Markets conference to be held in Vancouver *Sandvik focus on short-cycle press plates and endless belts for CPL *Pavatex gives Siempelkamp order for wood-fibre insulation board plant *Berneck postpones second continuous press MDF line *Tablemac plans to launch first MDF line at Barbosa *NFP Europe appointed agent for Tecsol
From trees to panels
Fujian Yongan has a substantial timberland operation, run to international standards, but it still feels the constraints on wood supply in trying to feed its 330,000m3 MDF manufacturing capacity
Published:  25 May, 2011

Not all high-tech: A common site in Chinese panel factories where maximum use is obtained from vehiclesFujian Yongan Forestry (Group) Joint Stock Co Ltd was originally founded in 1994 as a timberland company, planting and selling trees in Fujian province. At that time, it was wholly owned by Yongan City government.

In 1996, the company was floated on the Shenzhen stock exchange and now the Yongan government owns just 41% of the company. By this time, the company owned and managed 410,000mu (27,300ha) of timberland comprising pine and ‘local’ wood species.

Having entered the stock market, the newly-funded company bought its first panel production line. This was a Schenck MDF line, in fact built in 1994 by the Yongan government, with a design capacity of 30,000m3, later modified to 50,000m3.

“This was the first Schenck line in Asia and the first continuous process line in Asia as well,” said Lin Qing, vice president of Yongan.

That line continued in production until 2010 and the equipment was then sold.

“At the same time as starting with the new line, we expanded our plantation area and it now totals 1.8 million mu (120,000ha) and currently this makes Yongan Forestry the biggest timberland company in the south of China and this is an important leadership for the company,” said Mr Qing, who speaks good English.

The 15-daylight press from SWPM, built in 2002 and still in full useFrom 2000, the company also invested heavily in tree nurseries and introduced technology from Australia and from US forestry expert Weyerhaeuser company (which entered its first Chinese joint venture, with Yongan, in 2003). Beijing Forestry University, Nanjing Forestry Industry University and China Forestry Science Institute were also involved in this technology transfer, said the vice president.

Yongan Forestry is continuing to focus on the development of its timberlands and nursery, said Mr Lin.

Yongan does not supply logs to the pulp and paper industry and sells its larger-diameter logs to the plywood industry.

In 2002, Yongan began investment in a second MDF line, with refiner by Andritz of Austria and a 15-daylight press from Shanghai Wood Based Panel Machinery Co Ltd (SWPM) and a “mixture of other imported and Chinese-made machinery,” as Mr Lin put it.

Line 2 started production in 2003 and had a design capacity of 80,000m3/year. However, Yongan eventually stabilised production at between 100-110,000m3/year.

The company continued to run just the two lines until 2008, when it started the investment in a third line by placing a contract with Dieffenbacher for a CPS continuous press. The design of the complete line was carried out by Dieffenbacher, which also contract-managed its setting up and the design capacity was 220,000m3/year.

View of line from outside high-level control roomFoundations were laid in June 2009 and the machinery, including the 33m long and 9ft wide CPS press, was delivered from January 2010. First board was produced in September of the same year, with formal acceptance of the line taking place in the December. The line was on target to meet its anticipated full capacity by the end of March this year, said Mr Lin when WBPI visited in early March.

“We are producing 4, 4.75, 6, 8, 9 and 12mm with the main focus on thinner panels and we will produce about two-thirds of production in MDF and one-third in HDF,” said the vice president.

“Our main market is in Fujian province, for furniture, gift boxes, and doors using low-formaldehyde HDF.”

Other markets for Yongan include Shanghai, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Guangdong, with some board being exported to Korea.

Yongan also owns a laminate flooring manufacturing facility adjacent to its MDF factory, equipped with Homag machinery, which produces five to eight million m2 of flooring per year.

“We are also in business with a partner who has a factory making bamboo flooring in Yongan and there is also a plywood line there making panel from local wood species,” said Mr Lin. “We have no plans to build further MDF/HDF capacity here as there is not sufficient wood supply.

Some of the silos shrouded by steam“Dare Sanming is only about 50km from here and then there is Dare particleboard at Shanxian, about 80km away, both competing for the same wood supply.

“If we do build another line, it would be close to a sea port, because then we could import wood chips and export the finished board – and we are already investigating that possibility,” he added tantalisingly.

“We believe the market [for panels] will continue to increase, but it will be necessary to import wood raw material or MDF panels to supply that demand.

“I believe that particleboard – especially high quality particleboard – will increase more than MDF in the future because, historically, people think particleboard is of lower quality than MDF but for high-quality particleboard, the screw-holding capabilities are better than MDF.

“Also, I believe the market for laminate faced furniture panels made from a mixture of MDF and particleboard will increase, while poplar-based particleboard and MDF, rather than Chinese fir based panels, will have more market.”

The Andritz 56in refinerMr Lin also went on to explain that particleboard and MDF are increasingly replacing solid wood in doors in China, while the use of laminate flooring is continuing to increase. “But I believe the future is in low density MDF and particleboard,” he said.

Costs and pricing are as much an issue for Yongan as for everybody else in the industry today.

“Currently the price for raw material is not good and labour costs are also rising and I think the price of MDF will have to increase by the end of this year,” he said. “Some companies have already begun to adjust their prices.”

So it seems that even companies with 1.8 million mu of timberlands under their control – and a background in plantation management – are not immune to the problems of wood supply which plague the whole panel industry in China.



Calendar