Interfor Corporation announces plans to exit its operations in Québec, Canada, including the sale of its three manufacturing facilities and the closure of its Montréal corporate office. This strategic initiative will support a focus on the areas of highest future potential across the remainder of the Company.
As part of the exit plan, Interfor announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to sell its sawmills in Val-d’Or and Matagami as well as its Sullivan remanufacturing plant in Val-d’Or, along with all associated forestry and business operations, to Chantiers Chibougamau Ltée (“CCL”), a long[1]standing, privately-held, Québec-based forestry company.
The purchase price is estimated to be approximately $30 million in cash, based on the value of specific working capital items at June 30, 2024, which will be subject to normal course adjustments at closing, plus the assumption of certain liabilities by CCL.
Additionally, Interfor and CCL will enter into a multi[1]year contract for the supply of Machine Stress Rated (“MSR”) lumber to Interfor’s I-Joist engineered wood products (“EWP”) facility in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. The sale does not include any countervailing (“CV”) or anti-dumping (“AD”) duty deposits related to the ongoing US/Canada softwood lumber trade dispute. All historical CV & AD deposits up to the date of closing will be retained by Interfor.
Total CV & AD deposits related to the facilities up to June 30, 2024 totalled approximately US$56 million, excluding any interest. As part of the exit plan, Interfor also announced that it intends to permanently close its corporate office in Montréal in the coming months, allowing for the full realization of synergies associated with the Company’s EACOM Timber Corporation acquisition announced in November 2021.
Interfor will continue to own and operate its five sawmills and one I-Joist EWP facility in Ontario and its two sawmills and woodlands management business in New Brunswick. “After careful review of the potential future options for our Québec operations, we believe the sale to CCL is the best long-term outcome for Interfor,” said Ian Fillinger, President & Chief Executive Officer.
“The decision to exit our Québec operations was influenced by recent developments that have restricted the availability of economic fibre, including record forest fires in 2023. This divestiture enables us to focus resources on our remaining Eastern Canadian sawmills situated in Ontario and New Brunswick, which are well-positioned with competitive log costs and an increasingly valuable spruce[1]pine-fir lumber product mix.”