Pan Pac general manager Tony Clifford at the Whirinaki plant. Photo / Warren Buckland
Pan Pac is celebrating a major milestone - reigniting its chip mill at the flood-stricken plant north of Napier.
On Monday, it became the first production facility to become operational again at the Whirinaki pulp and timber plant since Cyclone Gabrielle.
As one of the region’s biggest employers,it’s been a big challenge for the past eight months to tidy up and rebuild the plant.
Floodwaters up to 2m high ripped through the site in February, damaging equipment, buildings and electronics.
The company says it is set to suffer a big loss of almost $200 million from the floods, as insurance payments cover only about a third of the estimated $280m cyclone costs and repairs.
The wood chips from the mill are being delivered to Napier Port and then shipped to Japan to be turned into paper.
That operation is only temporary, until the Whirinaki plant gets its pulp mill up and running again.
Pan Pac managing director Tony Clifford said the lumber business and mill at the plant would be up and running again in a limited capacity in November, along with one of the plant’s boilers, and the pulp mill would be operational again in February.
He said the company, owned by Japan’s Oji Group, hoped to have its entire plant back to full operation by late 2024.
Clifford said the cost of the cyclone to them was estimated to be $280 million, taking into account damage and rebuild costs and lost income from the plant not operating.
“Insurance will cover about a third of that. So we are significantly out of pocket.
“It is a little bit of a misconception that there is a big insurance job going on at Pan Pac, but [in terms of] insurance money we spent that months ago.”
The company employs about 400 staff, many of whom have been helping with the clean-up and rebuild.