Former B.C. sawmill gets fresh start as wood pellet plant - Action News
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British Columbia

Former B.C. sawmill gets fresh start as wood pellet plant

A sawmill in McBride, B.C., that shut down 13 years ago is getting a new life as a wood pellet plant. Boreal BioEnergy, a B.C.-based forestry company, has purchased the site and started building the new plant.

Up to 60 new jobs will be created in the central Interior village of McBride

Boreal BioEnergy will make torrefied wood pellets from wood waste at the new pellet plant in McBride, B.C., which is set to open in 2020. (Boreal BioEnergy)

A sawmill in McBride, B.C., that shutdown 13 years ago is getting a new life as a wood pellet plant.

Boreal BioEnergy, a B.C.-based forestry company, has purchased the site and started building the new plant in the community about 200 kilometres southeast of Prince George in the central Interior.

"We're well into our engineering and we're hoping to start our civil works this fall," company CEO Jason Janus told Daybreak North host Carolina de Ryk.

Construction is expected to start early next yearand the plant will begin operations in late 2020. Once it's fully operational, it will produce up to250,000 tonnes of black pellets each year, creating50 to 60 jobs for the region.

The plant's first shipment of wood pellets is scheduled to arrive in Japan in 2021.

"It makes sense that McBride is the location for the first torrefied wood pellet mill," McBride Mayor Gene Rutz said in a newsrelease. "We have good, hard-working people in the Robson Valley to provide a workforce that Boreal can count on."

A white pick up truck drives along a highway underneath a sign that arches over the road ans says welcome to McBride.
A former sawmill site in the central Interior town of McBride, B.C., will see new life as a wood pellet plant. (Google Maps)

Torrefaction is a process in which woodbiomass is heated in the absence of oxygen to produce a fuel that burns more like coal than the original wood fibre.

Janus expects the plant will be in business for at least 15 years, based on contracts with purchasers.

"I think there is definitely a niche for pellet producers to be able to fill some of that forestry gap because unlike the forestry industry, which is subject to price changes and fluctuations, we tend to operate more like ...a commodity like coal," he said. "So we can do future planning with a great deal more certainty."

The plant'sprimary source of fibreis wood waste the bits of wood that no one else wants to use. They then torrefy itbefore it goes to market.

"The fibre source is ideal for the pellet plant as we have poor-quality cedar and hemlock in the area and lots of deciduous tree species on private land," Rutz said.

Janus said the company is also looking at doing the same in Fort Nelson and Fort St. John in northeasternB.C., both at old sawmill sites. He said he hopes to be in the pre-engineering phase for both of those plants by this fall.

"Scenarios where we can establish ourselves in an existing site with the infrastructure already there obviously make sure our capital costs significantly less," Janus said.

With files from Daybreak North