04.11.09. Weyerhaeuser intends to build cellulose fibers
processing facility in Gdansk, Poland.
Weyerhaeuser recently
announced that it intends to build a new cellulose fibers processing
plant in Gdansk, Poland. City officials in Gdansk, the largest port city
in Poland, announced that Weyerhaeuser had won a competitive tender
process to purchase 100,000 square meters of land for this project. The
land-sale agreement is expected to be completed by year end, and the
company plans to break ground for the 17,000-square-meter facility in
the spring of 2010.
The facility will process cellulose fibers for
use in hygiene products. It will employ at least 45 people upon its
expected completion in 2012. The facility will be Weyerhaeuser’s first
cellulose fibers manufacturing plant outside of North
America.
"Weyerhaeuser is committed to investing in and carefully
growing business segments that add value to its timberlands portfolio
and that have demonstrated top-quartile performance in their competitive
categories," said Dan Fulton, Weyerhaeuser president and CEO. "We expect
worldwide demand for cellulose-based products to increase over the long
term. This new plant will enable our Cellulose Fibers business to grow
with a key customer."
Procter & Gamble will be the facility’s primary customer, and the state-of-art plant will supply P&G operations in Poland and western and eastern Europe. "The plant Weyerhaeuser is building in Gdansk supports a variety of P&G strategies," said Stassi Anastassov, vice president of Baby Care Central Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa for Procter & Gamble. "These include encouraging local sourcing of raw materials, fostering local employment, reducing overall costs and minimizing the company’s environmental footprint by reducing logistics requirements."
Polish
government officials acknowledge the significance of the investment in a
depressed global economy. "This is one of the most important foreign
investment commitments in the country in 2009 and was supported from the
very early stages of project development by the PAIiIZ staff," said
Sławomir Majman, president of the Polish Information and Foreign
Investment Agency (PAIiIZ).
"Weyerhaeuser’s choice of Gdansk demonstrates the city’s many strengths in serving central and eastern Europe," said Pawel Adamowicz, mayor of Gdansk. "Our excellent location, modern logistics infrastructure, and industry investment programs are some of the many advantages."
Fuente: Pulpapernews








