Wood Based Panels International
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*Particleboard plant for VMG Industries *Swedspan celebrates investment in Poland *International convention in Geneva *Garnica officially opens plywood factory *Norbord buoyed by OSB demand *Patented green veneer moisture measuring system *Congratulations to Heiner Wemhoener *Ghana’s wood products exports rises 4.3% *Malaysia mixes optimism with caution *IWPA approves new veneer standard *Weyerhaeuser to reopen Hudson Bay mill *Formica debuts VIVIX exterior panels *Sumitomo Forestry establishes Vietnamese particleboard subsidiary *Safwood starts OSB production in Komi Republic *Uniboard to close Fostoria lamination plant *Shear panel gets compliance verification *European panels symposium finalised *iLevel partners with CMPC *Tolko takes downtime at plywood operation *Atcon Plywood receiver hopeful of offers *GP completes acquisition of OSB mills in Canada and US *TFT announces production of legally verified Chinese plywood *The Dresden Resolution – Using Wood Responsibly *New publications on structural plywood and glulam standards *Plywood alternative, being trialled in UK *Biomass plants threaten UK wood panel industry, campaign says *IWPA welcomes US formaldehyde emissions standard legislation *VHI celebrates 90 years *Floraplac launches Chinese-built fibreboard line *Don't miss IPPS Master Class *Changes to Pfleiderer's supervisory board *Clarion Survey Germany acquires Survey Turkey *New director of marketing at Dieffenbacher *Successes and award for Schattdecor *New sales manager for Flakreboard *Mobile laser die cutting lab *UPM nursery celebrates 30 years *Three Interprint decors win award *UPM plans Finnish biofuels plant *ZOW 2010 in Italy is cancelled *DSM complete sale with name change for DSM Melamine *Wood products Vancouver conference *Appeal to change Boiler MACT rule *TurboSonic gets clean air order for US$900,000 *Targeting Rugby World Cup 2011 *Siempelkamp makes big breakthrough *LP plant earns safety award *Arauco back on track with new build *Evergreen to expand operations in next two years *Italian woodworking machinery showing good recovery *North American I-joist production boost *BASF product finder contains 800 product lines *Uniboard's Sayabec mill now certified *LP shows good sales figures *Biomass surpasses oil *Egger obtains environmental permit for €40m glue plant
Ten years on, what have we learned?
Published:  19 January, 2007
This issue contains two conference reports, the annual European Panel Products Symposium (EPPS), organised by the BioComposites Centre in Wales, and the biennial European Wood Based Panels Symposium, organised by the European Panel Federation and the Wilhelm Klauditz Institute and held in Germany. In the case of EPPS, this was the tenth such event (and the fifth for EPF/WKI). The symposium started life in the Imperial Hotel in Llandudno in October 1997. It has since moved to a purpose-built conference centre in the town and next year is to change its name slightly and move further afield, to Cardiff in south Wales.

Such an anniversary provided the inevitable - and valuable - opportunity to look back to the first EPPS and at why it was held.
Dr James Bolton, then director of the BioComposites Centre and since retired from work, said in his opening address that he wanted to: "Encourage the exchange of findings in both technological and fundamental research, to keep our industry as well-informed and competitive as possible, and to ensure that fundamental research is industrially relevant". That objective is of course at least as relevant today as it was then and was the guiding light for both this year's conferences. Since 1997, globalisation, increasing environmental challenges, emissions regulations, resource issues and much else has impacted the industry. And that makes these kind of gatherings ever more important. Yes, the content of that first EPPS was highly scientific and a few delegates were critical. One, himself a Phd scientist, notably said to me: "Some of this is a million miles from making panels". But was it? Where would the panel industry be today if scientists, technicians and engineers had not developed faster presses, better-performing and less-formaldehyde-emitting resins, new ways of processing raw materials and new ways of monitoring quality in a timely way on these ever-faster production lines? Look again at Dr Bolton's objectives and I think you will agree that little has changed and that where the industry is today is largely as a result of following that route and keeping the industry "as well-informed and as competitive as possible". The whole panel business has also become more international over the last 10 years and the BioComposites Centre is recognising that fact by re-naming itself to reflect where it has been for some time - the International Panel Products Symposium. I wonder how we will look back on the messages of EPPS 10 at IPPS 10? Happy Christmas and a very prosperous New Year to you all!