The Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) has reached financial close on a $660 million loan to Irving Pulp & Paper to support the large-scale modernization of the company's pulp mill in west Saint John, New Brunswick.
Enabled by the CIB's partnership, the modernization project consists of replacing 1970s era technology with current best-available solutions to improve productivity and maintain mill competitiveness within the sector. This includes a new recovery boiler, steam turbine and generator to produce up to 145 megawatts of renewable energy.
Excess energy generated at the mill will be exported to the provincial grid under a power purchase agreement with NB Power, with approximately 50 megawatts being used to sustainably energize mill operations.
Based on a third-party economic impact assessment provided by Irving Pulp & Paper1, during the construction period, the project is expected to generate approximately $539 million in employment income and create approximately over 2,200 person-years of employment. Long-term, the project will create more than 600 new jobs across the forest supply chain with employment income expected to rise by 38% in the forest products sector.
The modernization will make the mill energy self-sufficient, eliminate the combustion of heavy fuel oil as an energy source and reduce emissions per tonne of Kraft pulp by 50%, supporting the province's energy transition. The mill will become a global leader in environmental performance for this sector.
Once complete, this project will also position the mill among the top 10 global producers of softwood Kraft pulp—boosting production output by over 70%—while reinforcing the forestry sector as a key driver of economic growth.
The CIB's loan bridges lending gaps, enabling significant private capital investment and supporting decarbonization of the provincial electricity grid. It is aligned with the CIB's Clean Power mandate which supports generation, transmission and storage assets that reduce emissions, foster economic growth and enable access to lower-emitting, more affordable energy for Canadians.
Source: Yahoo Finance