Steve Johnson

Steve Johnson

Nippon mill’s $85 million cogeneration plant is operating — but not fully (With layoffs story)

PORT ANGELES — Nippon Paper Industries USA’s upgraded $85 million cogeneration plant, which company officials had planned to have fully online in November 2013, is operating but not fully.

It’s “still in the tuning phase,” mill Manager Steve Johnson said Tuesday.

“We’ve got environmental testing scheduled in the near future, and we are still ramping up,” Johnson said, estimating that tests will occur in January.

The boiler should be in uninterrupted operation by late spring, he predicted.

The plant’s old and new cogeneration boilers burn biomass — woody forest debris — to produce steam to run the paper mill.

The new boiler, expected to produce 20 megawatts of electricity for sale, has been generating electricity that Nippon is selling, Johnson said.

“The market still remains tough, and I am still working on additional customers,” he said.

Johnson said the boiler is fully capable of running at its rated capacity.

“We are continuing to tune and troubleshoot what I would describe as very minor problems,” he said. “Once we have successfully passed our environmental tests, we will ramp it up and get up to full production.”

Nippon’s electricity-producing cogeneration plant, which has never been up and running full bore, shut down completely March 11 this year after cracks were discovered in the boiler’s 25-ton, 30-foot-long mud drum.

The mud drum has been replaced, and Nippon and Covington, La.-based FSE Energy, which built the boiler, are in litigation over who is responsible for the fix, Johnson said.

Johnson said the company does not plan to sell only electricity once the cogeneration plant is operating uninterrupted.

“The cogeneration plant, as it’s built, is a very efficient plant, but it needs the paper mill, and the paper mill needs it,” Johnson said.

Port Townsend Paper Corp.’s $54 million project to upgrade its own cogeneration plant and produce up to 24 megawatts was abandoned earlier this year by company officials who blamed environmental challenges and inexpensive natural gas for dooming the effort.

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Bagpiper Rick McKenzie, who performed “Amazing Grace” during the 2023 regional Veterans Day ceremony in the hanger at U.S. Coast Guard Air Station/Sector Field Office Port Angeles, is scheduled to perform at this year’s ceremony, which will be held at the Port Angeles High School auditorium due to the federal government shutdown. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Veterans Day event moved to Port Angeles High School auditorium

Ceremony moved from air station due to federal government shutdown

Jackie Anderson, with Jax, has retired as officer manager for Sequim Animal Hospital after 32 years with the business. “I love the animals, but I love my clients because they love their animals in the good times and the bad times,” she said. “I’m going to miss the people.” (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
‘Touchstone’ for Sequim Animal Hospital retires

Jackie Anderson spent 32 years at business

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Peninsula boards to discuss timber, budgets

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Electronic edition of newspaper set Tuesday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition only… Continue reading

Veterans Day ceremony set at Port Angeles High School

The Clallam County Veterans Association will host a Veterans… Continue reading

Suggs flips Port Angeles council race, leads by 10 votes

Sanders maintains lead for position OMC board

Steve Burke.
Auditors: PA pool lacks controls

Report: Director benefitted financially over 6-year period

Community Services Director Melody Sky Weaver at the Port Townsend Carnegie Library. The library will receive a $10,000 gift from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the foundation founded by industrialist Andrew Carnegie. The library was opened in 1913 and the gift is to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Port Townsend, Port Angeles libraries to receive $10K as part of celebration

Corporation to provide funding in honor of country’s 250th birthday

One dies in collision on Hood Canal Bridge

Trooper says driver attempted U-turn at midspan

Port Townsend city employees work to clean up the Evans Vista homeless encampment on Thursday. The city hired Leland Construction of Roy to help with the process, which was initiated by the Port Townsend City Council in September. The city gave camp residents until Monday to vacate the premises and began the sweep of the area on Thursday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Camp cleanup

Port Townsend city employees work to clean up the Evans Vista homeless… Continue reading

Hospital projects a $7.5M loss in ’26

Interim CEO says it’s cash flow positive