Soy Fiber Based Plant Starts Up

Soy Fiber Based Plant Starts Up

Soy Fiber Based Plant Starts Up

Agristrand Mankato, LLC reports that production has commenced at its 160,000 sq. ft. manufacturing facility in Mankato, Minn. Agristrand is a manufacturer of “eco-friendly” soy fiber based soyboard and soycore and says its fiber is regionally sourced, annually renewable and products contain no added formaldehyde (NAF).

The manufacturing facility was purchased in November 2011, and has undergone major transformations with the addition of a proprietary fiber processing plant and many upgrades and improvements to produce a fully automated production line. The plant is currently rated at 40MMSF production capacity.

Agristrand will be taking advantage of this upcoming soybean harvest and is working with producers on best practices to harvest a superior fiber for its niche board production. The soy straw is a waste product as a result of the soybean harvest and would typically be chopped and redistributed onto the field. Agristrand’s soy acquisition team is contracting with farmers for approximately 45,000 acres of baled soy straw from an area within a 75 mile radius of Mankato.

Agristrand Mankato, LLC is the embodiment of many years of research and development. It began when four company founders, Thomas Neel, Timothy McDermott, William Priestly and Barry Monahan, began looking for an ag-fiber based alternative to wood based OSB as the market began to fluctuate in 2005. Many agricultural fiber alternatives were explored including corn, wheat and soy straw. Significant time was spent evaluating each fiber’s makeup then deciding that soy was the best alternative based on preliminary study. The founders determined which processes best matched the benefits of soy and oversaw a commercial run on full sized equipment. They concluded there was merit to finding a way to produce a composite board product utilizing soy fiber in a full scale commercial facility.

Company representatives, as well as forest product consultants, spent time at the USDA’s Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wis. to better define the processes for conditioning the fiber. Under the watchful eye of forest industry professionals a higher value soy fiber based MDF and particleboard was made realizing excellent properties. It was determined that conditioned soy fiber would perform very well based on the proprietary process utilized by Agristand.

Determining that the startup of a greenfield project was out of reach given the then economic times, the company began soliciting input from larger producers of particleboard and MDF interested in the possibility of utilizing soy fiber as an additive, or blend, with wood fiber. In late 2010, Company President Neel was approached by a representative of the bondholders of the recently shuttered facility in Mankato, Minn., which had manufactured a wheat fiber composite board product.

Agristrand Biocomposites, LLC began evaluating the opportunity and the possibility of converting the plant from wheat to soy and ultimately decided to pursue it. The location boasts a potential fiber source of 1.2 million acres within a 75 mile radius of the plant. Agristrand Mankato, LLC was born and acquired the assets of the board plant facility. There was considerable cleaning, deferred maintenance and upgrades to make the changeover to a soy based composite board product.

Today Agristrand Mankato, LLC reports it is the only manufacturer in North America of soy fiber based particleboard and door core products. “We have successfully meshed the interests of the nearby agricultural community with the interests of the building products industry,” the company states. “We have done this by employing people with agricultural experience as well as those from the composite board industry. With the inclusion of our proprietary front end conditioning equipment and methodology we are able to utilize a process that is similar to a typical board plant.”

Agristrand’s goal is to be a top quality producer of ag-fiber based particleboard and door core products. “Within this industry niche market we have found widespread support and interest from customers requesting ‘green’ alternatives,” the company states. “In today’s competitive environment the importance of supplying a sustainable product as a viable, competitive option is important.”

 

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2017: The Year Of Activity

2017: The Year Of ActivityArticle by Rich Donnell, Editor-In-Chief, Panel World November 2017 In the publishing world we’re always working on next...

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Come To Portland! We’ll ‘Show’ You A Good Time

Come To Portland! We’ll ‘Show’ You A Good Time

Story by Rich Donnell,
Editor-in-Chief

Like most businesses, we at Hatton-Brown Publishers, Inc. have had to diversify in order to strengthen ourselves. Life would be pretty simple if we merely had to produce magazines. Gone are the days when my only title was editor-in-chief. Now I’m also a Show Director. That’s “Show” as in Show Business. Our chief operating officer, Dianne Sullivan, is now also a Show Manager. Others here have enhanced their titles and responsibilities as well.

Many of you are familiar with our Panel & Engineered Lumber International Conference & Expo, immediately preceded by our Bioenergy Fuels & Products Conference & Expo, held every other year in Atlanta. These are primarily conferences, with dozens and dozens of speakers in lots of meeting rooms, supported by many small exhibits.

I hope by now you have heard of our newest event, the Timber Processing & Energy Expo, scheduled this October 17-19 at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Ore. This event is kind of the reverse of our Atlanta event. TP&EE is more of a traditional big machinery expo, with a small conference element to it.

In fact more than 150 exhibitors will be showcasing their technologies to primary producers—such as yourself—of veneer, plywood, engineered wood products, lumber and wood energy. Please read through pages 10-19 in this issue, and you’ll see who is exhibiting, who is speaking, where all this is happening, and how you can register.

Many of you, like us, for many years attended and exhibited at a previous machinery show in Portland. Like all shows, that one had its high points and low points. We decided to do our own event in Portland mainly because many of you had been asking us to do one. Even before our event in Atlanta, Hatton-Brown Publishers had entered show business by producing a timber harvesting show in the South. The idea of now doing a new show in Portland seemed to make a lot of sense.

I won’t bore you with details of how much work we’ve put into this event—we all work more than we should, right?—but I will say that I sincerely hope that the work we’ve done and continue to do has been the correct way to go about it, and that the new Timber Processing & Energy Expo will live up to your expectations and ours.

We feel the event is hitting at about the right time. The machinery manufacturers have been introducing new technologies and upgrading older ones. There seems to be some good news in the building sectors. And oh yes, isn’t there a presidential election happening the month after the show?

And when you come, bring a lot of your mill production personnel with you. Tell them to wear their company jackets proudly.

Weyerhaeuser Rebuilds Force

Weyerhaeuser Rebuilds Force

Weyerhaeuser Rebuilds Force

 

Weyerhaeuser Co. reports it is hiring additional trades and production workers at its engineered lumber products plants in Natchitoches and Zwolle, La., and Emerson, Ark.

“We are gearing up to ensure continuing product availability for our customers as demand for housing and light commercial construction recovers,” says Carlos Guilherme, Vice President of Engineered Lumber Products for Weyerhaeuser.

The Natchitoches plant manufactures Trus Joist TJI joists and Trus Joist Microllam laminated veneer lumber (LVL). The Zwolle and Emerson plants manufacture veneer and plywood.

 

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Foundation Feels Fields’ Goodwill

Foundation Feels Fields’ Goodwill

Foundation Feels Fields’ Goodwill

The Oregon Community Foundation announced a $150 million gift from the estate of Fred W. Fields, which will establish the Fred W. Fields Fund of The Oregon Community Foundation to support education and the arts.

It is the largest single gift ever made to OCF and one of the largest single gifts made to any community foundation in the country, according to OCF.

“OCF is honored to be the steward of a gift that will annually provide millions of dollars in support for essential education and arts programs in communities across the state,” says Max Williams, OCF President and CEO. “It is really a gift to Oregon and will continue the generous spirit of giving personified by Fred and (his deceased spouse) Sue Fields.”

Fields, the long-time owner of Coe Manufacturing, died last December 13 at age 88. He resided in Portland. Coe operated in Tigard, Ore. and Painesville, Oh.

“Fred loved business, he loved engineering and he loved Oregon. He was a generous person in his lifetime and wanted to establish this permanent fund to continue that support in perpetuity,” says OCF Board Chair Eric Parsons.

Established in 1973 by Portland philanthropist William Swindells Sr., the Oregon Community Foundation was formed as a permanent endowment for community improvement efforts throughout the state. It is now the largest foundation in Oregon with $1.1 billion in assets.

When Fields died he left significant bequests to many of the organizations that he and his wife had donated to during their lifetimes, including Lewis & Clark College, Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland Art Museum, Columbia River Maritime Museum and the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Oregon, to name a few.

Fields, who reportedly had never before given to the foundation and did not hint that such a landmark gift was coming before he died, left the bequest with wide-open instructions to the foundation: Use it to fund the arts and education in Oregon.

In early 2010 Fields released his autobiography, My Times With Coe: Free Enterprise At Its Finest, published by The Donnell Group and ghost-written by Panel World editor-in-chief Rich Donnell. Fields was raised on a farm in Alexandria, Ind. during the depression.

 

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Stevens Assumes LP CEO Post

Stevens Assumes LP CEO Post

Louisiana-Pacific appointed Curt Stevens to succeed Rick Frost as LP CEO effective in May. Frost, who served as CEO since 2004, retired from LP May 31.

Stevens, 59, joined LP in 1997 and has held senior management positions throughout his career at the company. He was appointed to the interim position of executive vice president, chief operating officer in December 2011. Previously, he served as executive vice president, administration and chief financial officer from May 2002 to December 2011. From September 1997 to April 2002, Stevens served as vice president, treasurer and chief financial officer.

Retiring CEO Frost comments, “I have been honored to have had the opportunity to lead LP over the past seven years. During some of the toughest times the building industry has ever seen, our people have improved operations, quality and market share while leading the industry in safety. Appointing Curt as CEO provides LP continuity with an experienced leader who is well prepared to address LP’s future challenges and opportunities.”

Stevens comments. “LP has exceptional people, quality products, and the financial position to take full advantage of an upturn in the housing market. Great things await us.”

LP has also promoted Brad Southern to senior vice president and general manager, Siding; and Brian Luoma to senior vice president and general manager, Engineered Wood Products.  Southern and Luoma will report to CEO Stevens.

Southern joined LP in 1999.  He has led LP’s Siding business since 2005 and was previously vice president of specialty operations. Luoma joined LP in 1987 and has headed the engineered wood products business since 2006.