New containerboard machine turns waste paper into new packaging
Stora Enso’s transformation continues, and as a tangible proof of this strategic journey the new containerboard machine at Ostroleka in Poland was officially inaugurated on 23 May. The crown jewel of Ostroleka Mill, the new light-weight containerboard machine that went on stream in early 2013, runs exclusively on recovered fibre.
– We have to continue to rethink, and the investment in Poland is another step in our transformation into avalue-creating renewable materials company focusing on growth markets, says Stora Enso CEO JoukoKarvinen.– The demand for modern light-weight corrugated packaging is increasing rapidly. The market in Central andEastern Europe will grow by over 5% per year, says Mats Nordlander, EVP, Renewable Packaging. Our new BM 5 will strengthen our position in the growing markets of Central and Eastern Europe, and at the same timesupporting our packaging growth strategy.Stora Enso’s integrated network for collecting paper for recycling in Poland, the new efficient power plant thatuses more than 50 % biofuels and this new state-of-the-art containerboard machine with low energyconsumption will make Ostroleka the benchmark for cost and product offering in Europe.Stora Enso has established its own collection system in Poland based on collection and sorting stations that ithas set up around the country. The packaging material it collects is transported to those collection stations,where it is separated from other waste material and baled. The final raw material is then transported to Stora Enso’s mill at Ostroleka and made into new products: cardboard boxes and board packaging.– The board waste may just look like colourful rubbish to some, but this raw material keeps huge boardmachines in motion. True recycling means more than just sorting. It means that perfectly functional new products are made from the recycled materials, says Jerzy Janowicz, Mill Director of Ostroleka Mill.