WILL IT PAY?
SUCCESS OF PAPER-PULP INDUSTRY DOUBTED EXPERT’S OPINION (From Our Resident Reporter.) WELLINGTON, Saturday. Doubts about the future of the paperpulping industry in New Zealand are raised by Mr. A. Machin. a visiting forestry engineer from the United States. Mr. Machin poiuts out that while large supplies of New Zealand woods are available for pulping it Is doubtful whether New Zealand-made paper could compete with prices of paper manufactured abroad. He considers the prospect of the Dominion working up an export trade in paper to be very low'. High labour charges, smaller output and freight and handling charges w r ould make cost to the overseas purchaser prohibitive. In addition he states that there aie few parts of New' Zealand w'here pulping plants can be established and conform to the anti-pollution laws for the protection of public health and fishing grounds, which prohibit refuse from mills being cast into streams or the sea. This difficulty, however, is not likely to affect local supplies, as Mr. A. R. Entrican, forest products engineer to the State Forest Service, pointed out in his report to the Commissioner of State Forests last year that the average importation of paper to New Zealand was 40,000 tons, valued at £1,000,000. Of this about 22,000 tons were newsprint. The whole of the Dominion’s s tip ply of newsprint thus could be more than covered by a paper-pulping plant turning out 100 tons a day. For the local market. Mr. Machin considers paper pulp may be made payable, but states that a good deal more capital is required for the industry.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 721, 22 July 1929, Page 11
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265WILL IT PAY? Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 721, 22 July 1929, Page 11
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