Archive for the ‘News’ Category

State representative: Lack of wood preventing sale of Katahdin mills

Monday, June 27th, 2011

MILLINOCKET, Maine — A lack of wood is one of several logjams preventing a Chinese investor from buying both Katahdin region paper mills for $1, one of the area’s state representatives says, though industry insiders say the wood’s affordability might be the real issue.

Rep. Herbert Clark, D-Millinocket, told the Town Council during its meeting Thursday that International Grand Investors Corp. of Delaware wasn’t finding enough wood in the area to make the purchase agreeable…

Read entire story on BangorDailyNews.com

Quimby’s national park initiative could spark lively debate in Millinocket

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

MILLINOCKET, Maine ― Town leaders will meet today to discuss whether to publicly oppose efforts to turn a vast chunk of the North Woods into a national park, something they last did in 2000.

Town Manager Eugene Conlogue said he expects “lively discussion” when the Town Council meets at 4:30 p.m.

Read entire article on BangorDailyNews.com

Negotiations continue on two fronts to save Katahdin mills

Wednesday, June 15th, 2011

AUGUSTA, Maine — Investors who recently bought a Baileyville mill were negotiating Tuesday to purchase two Katahdin region paper mills even as lawmakers and LePage administration officials scrambled to win support for a bill deemed critical to the potential sale.

Dan Whyte, vice president of Brookfield Asset Management, the current owner of the two Katahdin Paper mills, told the Bangor Daily News that talks “are in progress” to sell the facilities to International Grand Investors Corp. of Delaware for $1.

Read Full Article on BangorDailyNews.com

Maine Forest Service Sets Third Out-of-State Firewood Exchange

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

AUGUSTA, Maine – Highlighting the start of Maine’s camping season, the Maine Forest Service, under the Maine Department of Conservation, will again hold an out-of-state firewood exchange this weekend to prevent the importation of dangerous invasive insects to Maine’s forests and to make Maine visitors and residents aware of the problem.

A detail of Maine Forest Service forest rangers will set up an exchange station for two days, Thursday through Friday, May 26-27, at the northbound Kittery rest area, Interstate 95, according to Maine Forest Service (MFS) officials. Not only will the forest rangers exchange out-of-state wood for Maine wood, they also will give out warnings to those who import the banned firewood.

For the third time since the state ban was put in place last year, MFS forest rangers will exchange the prohibited out-of-state firewood for disposal as a way to prevent the spread of two invasive species in particular: Asian longhorned beetle (ALB) and emerald ash borer (EAB).

The threat from both invasive species to North American forests has become a matter of international concern, according to MFS officials. Both insects, already found in near-by states and Canadian provinces, threaten to destroy Maine’s forests.

“It makes a difference, it’s important, and the Maine Legislature has banned out-of-state firewood – we’re trying to make sure these pests do not get a free ride in,” said Dave Struble, MFS state entomologist. “We’re still largely in education mode, and we’ve spent a lot of time and effort getting the word out, working with the state’s promotional agencies, such as the Maine Office of Tourism, and groups such as the Maine Campground Owners Association. We’re getting the word out to visitors, hopefully before they and the bugs get here.”

“Maine’s forest rangers are committed to protecting Maine’s forest resources from threats of all types, including wildfires, abuse and invasive pests,” said Bill Williams, Maine’s chief forest ranger. “We are working closely with our departmental counterparts to ensure that invasive insects do not spread into Maine, which would result in potentially devastating effects on our state’s timber industry. Maine forest rangers will use their law enforcement authority to protect these resources by enforcing this law, as we do with many other statutes.”

The two invasive insects have destroyed millions of acres of trees in other states. ALB has infested the Worcester, Mass., area and recently was discovered in Boston. EAB, which has killed millions of ash trees and threatens Maine’s American Indian basket-making tradition, has been found in New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Maryland, and the Canadian provinces of Quebec and Ontario.

The first Maine firewood exchange was held September 2010, followed by a second one that October after an emergency order immediately implementing the firewood ban was put in place. Legislation calling for the ban was passed during the 124th Legislature.

Both exchanges were very successful, and wood samples taken during the exchanges were placed in incubation at the New Hampshire Division of Forest and Lands, which has a hatching laboratory, Struble said. The lab consists of a series of ventilated barrels each with glass-emergence jars and a light trap to monitor what emerges from the wood samples, he said.

So far, no invasive species have emerged, “but we won’t really know until the middle of the summer” when the insects normally appear, Struble said. He is anticipating a final report from the lab at that time.

Similar to the previous exchanges, a detail of six Maine forest rangers will staff the Kittery rest area, according to Lt. Jeffrey Currier, Maine Forest Rangers, who is overseeing the operation. Two large, message signs will direct travelers to the exchange station, he said.

Anyone found transporting out-of-state firewood will be required to exchange their firewood for a comparable amount. The confiscated wood will be bagged in plastic and disposed at a wood biomass facility. Each exchange will be logged, according to Currier.

The exchange may be continued on Saturday, May 28, depending on weather conditions and the volume of previous exchanges, Currier stated.

Struble said that Maine state park campgrounds and private campgrounds, many which open this weekend, also are participating in the preventative effort.

“Most are trying to address the situation by providing wood on site and encouraging campers to buy wood locally,” the state entomologist said. “The message is we don’t want people bringing it in — if you have people bringing it in, burn it immediately.”

What is of greatest concern, Struble said, is the out-of-state firewood brought by people to their private camps. He said it important for neighbors to remind neighbors of the ban to protect Maine’s forests. He said the invasive insects also may be in areas not yet identified as infested, so it is imperative to keep out all non-Maine firewood.

“Our guests are coming into Maine from areas known to be infested,” he said. “We’re working with the assumption that most know not to bring in firewood, and we’re working to reach the others who don’t know this.”

The threat has reached international levels of concern, the state entomologist said. There already is an international joint quarantine on firewood from Canada, and the issue is being raised through such efforts as the Continental Dialogue on Non-Native Forest Insects and Diseases, an international forum of foresters, horticulturists and others spearheaded by The Nature Conservancy, Struble said.

“The step we are taking with the firewood exchange and ban are fully in keeping with regional, national and international concerns,” Struble said. “We are ahead of the curve in that we have regulations in place.”

The state now is operating under an emergency ban, though final regulations are being drafted, Struble said. He said he still is reviewing how the order is working before the final regulations are presented for public comment and are put in place.

“It’s in everyone’s best interest to make sure wood isn’t brought in so it doesn’t destroy Maine’s forests,” Struble said. “If these invasive species get established, it will destroy Maine’s forests, Maine jobs, and destroy something critical to what we are as Mainers.”

For more information on the Maine Forest Service, go to: www.maineforestservice.org

For more information about the Maine out-of-state firewood ban, go to: www.maine.gov/firewood

LURC draws fire, support during legislative hearing

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

By Christopher Cousins

AUGUSTA, Maine — Supporters and opponents of the Land Use Regulation Commission turned out in droves Tuesday to either trash or sing the praises of the commission and its 40 years of influence over more than 10 million acres of Maine’s Unorganized Territory.

Depending on who was speaking, LURC either protects Maine’s North Woods from rampant and destructive sprawl or stands in the way of economic development that could curb a more than 10 percent average unemployment rate in the Unorganized Territory.

Read Full Story in the Bangor Daily News

Doug Denico: Budding expertise

Monday, April 25th, 2011

Longtime forester trades life in the woods for a spell in the capital

By CAROL COULTAS, Mainebiz editor

Doug Denico has been at home in the depths of Maine’s forests.

A certified forester, Denico made a career of managing forests for companies…

Now he finds himself in a different world …

the State House in Augusta, where as Maine’s newest state forester, he carries responsibility for protecting Maine’s 17 million acres of trees. “My goal is to find out what the customer wants and respond to that,” referring to commercial and recreational users.

Read entire article on Mainebiz.biz

Holden man dies after being caught between skidder, tree

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

By Nok-Noi Ricker, BDN Staff

ORRINGTON, Maine — A local woodcutter was killed Tuesday afternoon when he got caught between a skidder and a tree while working in the woods off Mason Hill Road, Assistant Fire Chief Scott Stewart said on Wednesday.

“The victim was pronounced dead at the scene,” he said.

Holden resident William Jordan, 38, was working for local company Larry Eckert and Son, which had been hired to log the private land, Sgt. William Birch of the Penobscot County Sheriff’s Office, who is leading the investigation, said Wednesday.

Read full article in the Bangor Daily News

Quimby buys Lunksoos Camps on Penobscot

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

OLD TOWN, Maine — Conservationist Roxanne Quimby has purchased Lunksoos Camps, a wilderness sporting facility on the East Branch of the Penobscot River, according to a Tuesday news release.

Originally built in 1881, the camps have changed hands several times.

Today, the camps consist of a lodge and four cabins situated on 13.8 acres on the east side of the East Branch, 10 miles west of Sherman Mills, and accessible by road from Stacyville.

Read full story on: BangorDailyNews.com

Conservation chief sees forest for trees

Monday, April 18th, 2011

By Susan M. Cover

AUGUSTA – Sixteen months ago, Bill Beardsley left his job as president of Husson University to run for governor…

…Now, he finds himself working for one of his former rivals — Gov. Paul LePage — as commissioner of the Department of Conservation.

…When nominating him for the position in December, LePage said Beardsley’s resume was so varied — a state planner in Vermont, hydroelectric vice president in Maine, forest products director in Alaska — he had trouble deciding where best to use his talents.

…”I’ve always asked, what’s the economic value, what’s the present worth,” Beardsley said during a recent interview in his Augusta office.

Read entire story in the PortlandPressHerald

FOEX: Latest PIX Index Values with comments – March 29, 2011

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011
Tuesdays 4 pm 3.29.2011 Δ prev. week in currency Δ beg. 2011 in currency
PIX US NBSK USD 985.19 +0.83 +18.08
PIX US Newsprint USD 626.93 +0.01 +1.33
PIX US Newsprint 27.65lb USD 669.74 +0.01 +0.44

Market Comments

US NBSKP – Shipments on pulp to the North American market were fairly weak in February, reflecting the declines seen in paper shipments. The PPPC data showed shipments of paper grades market pulp down by as much as 9.6% against February 2010. Supported by good demand elsewhere – and by the approaching high season for paper and maintenance downtime period for pulp – the US BSKP market has remained tight. Price increases have been announced separately by several major producers, typically by 30 USD/ton from April 1. If fully successful, the attempted hike would bring the gross contract price up to 1020 USD/ton. The data reported was again in a range between 960 and 990 USD, with 990 USD clearly the most common individual quote. Our PIX NBSKP US index moved up by 83 cents, or by 0.1%, and closed at 985.19 USD/ton.

US Newsprint – February was another very weak month for the North American newsprint. In addition to the softness of the domestic market, the export volumes were down and inventories moved up. The weather conditions and other logistics problems are reported to have delayed the export shipments causing most of the inventory hike. The US publishers’ inventories are rather elevated. The latest price data for the US Newsprint indexes included some slight changes from last week.  The PIX US Newsprint 30lb index moved up by 1 cent, or 0.0%, to 626.93 USD/ton, and the 27.7 lb index moved up by the same 1 cent, or 0.0%, to 669.74 USD/ton.

Read More on FOEX.fi


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