The new waste wood recycling plant will process regional class A1 and A2 waste wood to produce pressboard pallet blocks. Pfeifer is also modernizing the log cutting process at the Uelzen site: a new, high-performance sawing line is set to replace the more than 30-year-old system in the second half of 2025.

Schnittholz

Pfeifer invests in Uelzen sawmill, Germany

Pfeifer invests in Uelzen sawmill, Germany

Bild: Pfeifer Group

A state-of-the-art sawing line and a new waste wood recycling plant are being launched at the Pfeifer Group's Uelzen site – both part of a comprehensive investment package to secure and sustainably develop the plant for the long term.

The new waste wood recycling plant will process regional class A1 and A2 waste wood to produce pressboard pallet blocks. This will keep wood products in use longer and store climate-damaging CO₂ for an extended period. At the same time, the new sawmill ensures greater efficiency and an even better raw material yield.

The centerpiece of the new waste wood recycling plant on the expanded site at the port of Uelzen is the striking recycling tower. Here, Pfeifer recycles material exclusively in accordance with the Waste Wood Ordinance. Wooden pallets that can no longer be repaired are also recycled, ensuring that Pfeifer complies with the new European Packaging Ordinance (PPWR). Deliveries are first visually inspected and analyzed in the laboratory to ensure the consistently high quality of the end products. Contaminants are removed in the cleaning tower and sent for recycling. The cleaned wood is shredded, temporarily stored in silos and finally processed into standardized pressboard blocks.

With the construction of the waste wood recycling plant, Pfeifer is advancing resource-saving, sustainable material utilization. Whereas in the past, pallet blocks were manufactured exclusively from by-products of sawn timber production in Uelzen, in the future the company will rely on a mix of fresh chips and cleaned recycled wood – a step that not only maximizes the use of raw materials but also reduces dependence on fresh wood.

In parallel with the recycling project, Pfeifer is also modernizing the log cutting process at the Uelzen site: a new, high-performance sawing line is set to replace the more than 30-year-old system in the second half of 2025. The aim of the investment is to reduce production costs, increase yields and boost output to ultimately make the entire production process even more efficient.