2018 International Forest Industries IFI Feb March 2018 Digital | Page 12
LOGGING & BIOMASS NEWS
13,000th Ponsse machine celebrates extension
of production facility
Ponsse recently celebrated two
important milestones. The biggest
extension project in the company’s
history has reached the topping-
out phase, and the factory has
produced the 13,000th forest
machine made in the Vieremä
facility in Finland.
Ponsse machine number
13,000, an Ergo 8w, was delivered
to the company’s German customer
FoWi GmbH & Co. This also marks
the beginning of Ponsse’s and
German distributor Wahlers
Forsttechnik GmbH’s jubilee
year: 25 years have passed since
Ponsse and Wahlers signed their
contract on distribution and service
collaboration in the German-
speaking regions of Europe.
The seeds of this collaboration
were sown already in the early
1970s when Einari Vidgrén,
Ponsse’s founder, was logging
on a storm devastation sites in
Germany.
Quality and flexibility
through investments
The current production facility
investment is the biggest in
Ponsse’s history: the factory
will expand from the current 2.7
hectares to 4 hectares. Most
importantly, the investment
contributes to ongoing
improvement and development
of quality, flexibility, safety and
productivity of Ponsse’s operations.
The extension of production
facilities enables the company
to respond to changing market
situations with more flexibility,
and to tailor machines to customer
requirements more efficiently in
a serial-production environment.
The new facilities in Vieremä will
be completed by the end of the
year, and will be the most advanced
forest machine production facility
in the world.
- O
ur strong focus on the
development of cut-to-length
forest machines requires
constant development of our
production operations. That is
the only way we can fulfil the
needs of our customers and stay
at the forefront of technology in
the demanding forest machine
market. A safe, modern factory
is also an important investment
in our employees’, says Ponsse’s
President and CEO Juho
Nummela.
The Ponsse factory in Vieremä
currently employs 570 employees,
390 of whom work in production
tasks. It’s forest machines are
made in Vieremä, Finland.
New factory in operation by
end of year
New assembly lines and storage
facilities housed in the new
extension will be phased in
gradually during 2018. Relocation
to new facilities starts in March
with warehouse operations. New
smart warehouse technologies
make production warehouse
logistics more efficient and
increase the degree of automation
considerably. Warehouse
automation covers 15,500
storage slots for small items and
components and 3,900 pallet
positions.
After the warehouse relocation,
a new harvester head assembly
line will move to the new facilities.
A new assembly line for base
machines will be in operation by
the end of the summer, and by end
of 2018 cabin and crane assembly
lines will also be renewed. The
amount of production-time testing
used to support quality control will
increase in all production lines.
Southern NZ forestry companies optimistic
Log export prices are having a 25-
year high, with southern industry
insiders optimistic longer-term
gains are likely to be sustained.
As of December 17, key indicator
the At Wharf Gate price for A-grade
logs 30cm or more at the small
end, stood at $148 per export
cubic metre, according to the latest
available data from PF Olsen Ltd.
Invercargill-based Log
Marketing NZ Ltd general manager
Greg Lindsay said that put average
prices at their highest since August
1993. The peak had been driven by
strong demand from Chinese and
Indian markets.
“China has had environmental
constraints applied reducing
domestic log production, which has
contributed to increased export
demand. Shipping rates are also
relatively competitive currently.
Allied with strong domestic and
Australian demand during recent
years, typical seasonal price
peaks and troughs were also
diminishing”, Lindsay said.
Southern Wood Council
chairman Grant Dodson said
market indicators suggested
current good prices would be
sustained. “We expect some
volatility with price up and downs
across the year. This is business as
usual for forestry but fundamental
demand and market conditions
remain strong.”
Although council members
across the region were “very
positive” about industry prospects,
Dodson highlighted possible
concerns on the horizon. “The
impact of the recent share market
10 International Forest Industries | FEBRUARY / MARCH 2018
correction is yet to play out. There
may be some impact depending on
how significant the correction ends
up,” he said.
“Additionally, although local
log demand is strong, local mills
are having to compete with export
log prices, which is causing some
discomfort while markets adjust.
But forest owners and mills are
simply working through this as
they have many times in the past.
It’s great to see strong returns from
forestry and lots of busy domestic
mills.”
Rayonier Matariki Forests
managing director Paul Nicholls
was also positive, while urging
perspective over current prices.
“Log prices peaked in 1993 but,
when adjusted for inflation, there
have been several other price
Greg Lindsay, General Manager,
Log Marketing NZ Ltd
peaks higher than today,” he said.
Rayonier had operated in the
south since 1992, with current
market conditions allowing for
greater business flexibility, he said.
“We’re in a good position to export
the logs that don’t meet domestic
processors’ specifications. We’re
also able to harvest and export
minor species established by the
Forest Service that have been
uneconomic until now. This allows
us to establish more commercially-
focused plantations.”