Nordic Papermakers Call for Shredding Sulfur Limits
By Janina Pfalzer - Jan 17, 2013 5:00 PM CT
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QUEUE
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Nordic papermakers accounting for a fifth of global
output are fighting curbs on sulfur emissions from
ships in the Baltic Sea that they say will make
transport costs higher than for rivals in regions
where limits are lower.
Rules adopted by the International Maritime
Organization mean it will become cheaper to ship
pulp to Rotterdam from Brazil than northern Sweden,
said Jan Johansson, chief executive officer of
Svenska Cellulosa AB (SCAB), Europes top tissue
producer. SCA runs a fleet of vessels that must
also sail via the North Sea, another area affected
by the curbs, to reach end markets.
Enlarge image Svenska Cellulosa AB CEO Jan Johansson
Svenska Cellulosa AB Chief Executive Officer Jan
Johansson said rules adopted by the International
Maritime Organization mean it will become cheaper
to ship pulp to Rotterdam from Brazil than northern
Sweden. Photographer: Linus Hook/Bloomberg
Directives aimed at stemming air pollution from
ships say the amount of sulfur used in fuel in the
two European seas and waters off North America must
be cut to 0.1 percent from 1 percent by Jan. 1,
2015, versus 3.5 percent elsewhere. Sweden exports
85 percent of its forest products, prompting
companies including Holmen AB (HOLMB) to seek a
delay in the steps until 2020.
I just dont get why we are making a rod for our
own back, Holmen CEO Magnus Hall said in an
interview. We are talking competitiveness, welfare
and GDP growth prospects.
A jump in costs would weigh on an industry
struggling to make money as Europes debt crisis
dents demand. UPM-Kymmene Oyj (UPM1V) of Finland,
the regions No. 2 papermaker, said yesterday that
writedowns and charges clipped fourth-quarter
profit by 1.6 billion euros ($2.1 billion), and
Nordic stock performances are also lagging behind
those of competitors in the tropics.
Brazil Surge
SCA has gained 35 percent in the past six months
and Holmen is up 5.8 percent, versus jumps of
almost 70 percent at Fibria Celulose SA (FIBR3) of
Brazil, the largest pulp producer, and close to 90
percent at Suzano Papel e Celulose SA, the
countrys No. 2.
The European Union, where the rules were enacted on
Dec. 17, says tighter curbs are necessary to
improve public health and protect fragile
ecosystems. Ship emissions increase the risk of
conditions such as chronic bronchitis and lung
cancer and cause 50,000 premature deaths a year in
Europe, according to a study by Denmarks Centre
for Energy, Environment and Health.
Exporters face a 28 billion-krona ($4.3 billion)
increase in costs in Sweden alone, including 13
billion kronor in higher fuel bills, SCAs
Johansson estimates. Holmen, Europes fourth-
largest producer of publication paper, fears an
additional 150 million kronor in annual fuel
expenses, Hall estimates.
Dedicated Fleet
Foreign trade accounts for half of Swedens gross
domestic product, and with only a single road to
mainland Europe, the Oeresund Bridge to Denmark,
about 90 percent of goods go by sea.
At SCA, half of total volumes are carried in three
roll-on roll-off ships measuring 170 meters (558
feet) long and with a capacity of 8,200 tons, plus
a single container carrier.
Operated by Stockholm-based SCAs Transforest
shipping unit, the vessels load up twice a week in
Umeaa and Sundsvall, north of the capital, and sail
to Rotterdam and London, where their cargo is
disgorged for transfer to ports around the world. A
second route serves Germany via the Baltic harbor
of Luebeck.
Ships outside the designated areas must cut the
sulfur content of fuel to only 0.5 percent by 2020,
the IMO regulations say. That may hand an advantage
to Brazils Fibria and Suzano.
Tropical producers are already squeezing European
companies by tapping a longer annual growing season
that means eucalyptus trees can be harvested after
eight years, compared with 50 for pines. Some
European papermakers including Helsinki-based Stora
Enso Oyj (STEAV), the biggest in the region, and
UPM have added mills and plantations in South
America to help counter the threat.
Modest
International Paper Co. (IP), the No. 1 U.S.
papermaker, has a far bigger home market than the
Nordic producers and does not operate its own
ships. The Memphis, Tennessee-based company
estimates the cost of the sulfur regulations at
less than $1 million dollars spread over 3 million
export tons.
While we do not like to see any of our costs rise,
the increase for low-sulfur fuel is relatively
modest, International Paper spokesman Tom Ryan
said in an e-mail. Our exports would only be
partially affected for the portion of time that our
ocean carrier ships would be on U.S. or EU waters.
The variation in charges means Nordic companies
couldnt raise prices to pass higher expenses to
customers without losing market share, leaving cost
cutting as the only option at a time when
operations are already being slashed, Johansson said.
SCA said Dec. 19 it would cut two sawmills and 200
posts at the forest-products unit after announcing
1,500 job cuts at its hygiene operations the
previous month. Net income at the company fell 72
percent to 356 million kronor in the third quarter
while dropping 27 percent to 249 million kronor at
Holmen.
Scrubbers, LPG
Operators can comply with the IMO directive in
three ways; using low-sulfur fuel oil in the
restricted zones, fitting ships with exhaust-gas
cleaning systems or scrubbers, and switching to
propellants such as liquid natural gas. The first
two steps are more costly, and Baltic ports
generally dont supply LPG.
Lobbying has so far fallen on deaf ears, according
to Hall and Johansson, with a letter dated June 29
to Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt
receiving no reply. Another from Confederation of
Swedish Enterprise Chief Urban Baeckstroem in
October was also ignored, his spokesman, Peter
Isling said.
The letters were forwarded to the Environment
Ministry, Reinfeldts spokesman Daniel Valiollahi
said by phone. Erik Bratthall, a spokesman for
Environment Minister Lena Ek, whose Centre Party
describes itself as green social liberal, didnt
respond to e-mails, phone calls or text messages.
Exemption
Sweden could, in collaboration with other EU
countries, apply to the London-based IMO for an
exemption from the rules, Karolina Boholm, director
of transport at the Swedish Forest Industries
Federation, said in an e-mail. This has to be done
by March, and companies cant apply individually,
she said.
IMO spokesman Lee Adamson said the measures it
adopts always originate from countries in whose
waters they will apply, and become law only with
the force of national or EU law.
Johansson said a campaign by ministers to scrap a
ban on exports of snus, a Swedish tobacco powder
consumed by placing it under the lip, is an example
how aggressively the government should handle the
IMO regulations.
When you look at how much Sweden is fighting for
snuff you wish someone would fight like that for us
too, he said.