Business Standard

NEW CASH FLOW

- TE NARASIMHAN Chennai, 23 May

JK Paper Ltd (JKPL) has lined up an investment of around $100 million (~650 crore), part of which will be accounted for by the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC) putting in around $50 million.

JKPL is a leading Indian producer of office paper, packaging boards, printing and writing paper, and specialty paper.

JKPL could not be reached for comments.

The proposed project entails capacity expansion and efficiency improvemen­t, capital expenditur­es at the two existing plants, and debt refinancin­g.

The IFC’s investment aims at improving the company’s productivi­ty and restructur­ing its balance sheet.

The proposed IFC investment is in the form of secured non-convertibl­e debentures (NCDs) of up to ~325 crore ($50 million equivalent). The project locations are the company’s two plants in Odisha and Gujarat. The project will support the company’s efforts to make its plants more energy-efficient by reducing the usage of water and coal. In addition, the project supports the company, which now plants more trees than it fells. JK Paper has two integrated pulp and paper facilities: The Central Pulp Mill (CPM), located at Fort Songadh near Surat in Gujarat, and the JK Paper Mill (JKPM), near Rayagada in Odisha.

The current production capacity at the CPM is 160,000 tonnes per annum

IIIIIJKPL is a leading Indian producer of office paper It makes boards, printing and writing paper, and specialty paper The fund will be used in capacity expansion and efficiency improvemen­t, capital expenditur­es at the two existing plants, and debt refinancin­g IFC’s investment is in the form of secured non-convertibl­e debentures of ~335 crore This will support the company’s efforts to make its plants more energy-efficientb­y reducing the usage of water and coal (tpa) of paper and paper board. The JKPM has a capacity of 295,000 tpa of paper.

At the CPM, about 26,000 tpa of bamboo is purchased from tribal villages that have been given bamboo harvesting rights by the Gujarat Forest Department. Further, about 202,000 tpa of wood (eucalyptus, casuarina and subabool/leucaena leucocepha­la) is procured directly from farmers engaged in farm forestry at a guaranteed fixed price purchase basis at mill gate. The plant needs 250,000 tpa of wood and the shortfall is made up by importing pulp. The CPM purchases wood from about 2,500 farmers.

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