Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Georgia-Pacific invests $500M to expand Broadway Mill

- Jeff Bollier Green Bay Press-Gazette USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

GREEN BAY - A recent change to the Green Bay skyline of smokestack­s and steeples was among the investment­s that set up Georgia-Pacific’s Broadway Mill for a $500 million expansion announced Thursday.

Georgia-Pacific Corp. announced that will add a new paper machine, converting equipment and 150 new jobs at the plant located at 1919 S. Broadway.

The expansion will take until mid-2024 to complete, said Mike Kawleski, Georgia-Pacific spokespers­on. Once done, the 102-year-old Broadway Mill will employ about 1,000 people. Kawleski said the investment in the Green Bay mill reflects the local workforce’s efficiency, productivi­ty, safety and sustainabi­lity.

“Green Bay is looked upon as a group of facilities that delivers some results,” Kawleski said.

The Broadway Mill’s conversion from coal to natural gas between 2015 and 2021, which also resulted in removal of the smokestack­s, helped clear the way for this expansion, Kawleski said.

“When you get rid of obsolete assets, you have space for new investment­s such as these,” Kalewski said. “This whole paper-making complex — the machines, the converters, the infrastruc­ture — will go where coal once was. We need to modernize gradually and continuous­ly, especially when you have a mill that is over 100 years old.”

The company turned off its last coalfired boiler in late 2020 and removed the last 400-foot smokestack this year.

“It went very well,” Kawleski said of the removal effort. “The weather plays a huge component when you’re dealing with something that tall and big, but really it came down safely.”

The conversion from coal to natural gas is one of several improvemen­ts Georgia-Pacific made to the mill in the last seven years at a cost of about $150 million. Beyond gas boilers, the company has also installed a $7 million towel line, upgraded the bath tissue converting line, spent $10 million on laser-guided vehicles to move material around the mill and done extensive renovation­s to existing buildings and grounds.

Georgia-Pacific estimates it has invested more than $700 million in its Green Bay paper mills, on Broadway and Day Street, since 2006. The expansion announced Thursday would boost that investment to $1.2 billion.

The paper products manufactur­er in 2019 briefly considered a different expansion plan for the Broadway Mill, but ultimately did not pursue it.

The new paper machine and converting equipment will produce paper products that consumers buy in stores. Georgia-Pacific brands include AngelSoft and Quilted Northern toilet paper, and Brawny and Sparkle paper towels.

Engineerin­g work has begun for the expansion. A company media release indicates the expansion will require the work of 500 constructi­on and contracted workers.

Kawleski said he does not anticipate the company requesting financial assistance from the city of Green Bay or Brown County, but that it is discussing potential assistance with the Wisconsin Economic Developmen­t Corp.

Georgia-Pacific’s investment shows the community is making the case that companies large and small should invest here, Brown County Executive Troy Streckenba­ch told the Press-Gazette.

“You could see the pride in the individual­s who were working there — they understood if they’re able to produce product out of this mill, to prove the work ethic and safety record … it would make sense for them to make the investment,” Streckenba­ch said. “This is just a huge win to those people who work there.”

This is the second time in five years that a Green Bay paper company has invested $500 million in one project. Green Bay Packaging, a maker of corrugated packaging, turned on its new paper mill in March after spending almost three years building it.

Press-Gazette reporter Doug Schneider contribute­d to this report.

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