Pellets mean power in Atikokan: province picks fuel suppliers for wood pellet power plant.

AuthorRoss, Ian
PositionGREEN REPORT

Within a day of being awarded a provincial wood pellet supply agreement, Thunder Bay's Ed Fukushima was on the phone negotiating with a manufacturer of pellet press dies.

The president of Atikokan Renewable Fuels had been waiting for months for word from Ontario Power Generation (OPG) on a procurement contract to supply the feed stock for the Atikokan Generating Station, a former coal burner now undergoing a $170-million conversion to burn wood pellets.

"This is a great announcement," said Fukushima, who runs three Thunder Bay companies. "It helps us get our base loading on our plant and it triggers our financing to get our plant into production."

In late November, his company, and Resolute Forest Products of Montreal, were both named the official suppliers of wood pellets to the Atikokan plant, located 200 kilometres west of Thunder Bay.

Both companies were handed 10-year contracts to each supply 45,000 tonnes of pellets annually when the plant begins burning wood pellets by the end of 2014.

Aecon Group is designing and building the generating station's pellet fuel handling equipment and storage silos. Construction began this past fall.

Atikokan Renewable Fuels is a startup company run by Fukushima and Larry Levchak. They bought a shuttered particleboard plant in Atikokan in 2009 with plans to convert it into a pellet mill.

Fukushima said having a supply contract with OPG in hand clears the way to start outfitting his plant.

At the same time, he is negotiating off-take agreements with European customers which he expects to be finalized by late December. That's where the balk of his 140,000 tonnes of annual production will go. Only 30 per cent is earmarked for the power station, 14 kilometres away from his pellet mill.

But to secure financing for mill equipment, Fukushima said he was forced to go outside Canada, even offshore, since domestic chartered banks want nothing to do with forestry

"Even with (European) off-take agreements, they are not interested."

His pellet mill will be the cornerstone of a spinoff venture, Great North Bio Energy a partnership with the Whitesand and Sand Point First Nations, which involves constructing two satellite pellet mills in those communities and training locals to operate them.

Fukushima's Atikokan mill will create 45 plant jobs, plus about 100 indirect harvesting and trucking jobs, and about 60 jobs in each of his partnering communities.

With a Crown wood allotment of 279,000 cubic metres, Fukushima...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT