Jul 14, 2011. /Lesprom Network/. Tembec announced a $6 million investment in its Béarn sawmill, located in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region, in Québec, Canada. Support from the Province of Québec in the amount of $3.6 million will come as a grant from the Heavy oil consumption reduction program. The construction phase will start in the fall of 2011 and will be completed in the spring of 2012. This initiative, aimed at substantially reducing energy costs, entails replacing two existing 6000-kW boilers by a single 7000-kW boiler that will provide adequate heating for the sawmill. This new boiler will also provide the required energy to operate the mill’s two kilns. “Thanks to this investment, these operations will be significantly more competitive, more efficient and more ecological. Not only will we operate a more performing asset, but we will also contribute to the enhancement of the quality of the environment as well as continue to fulfill part of the energy needs at our specialty cellulose plant in Témiscaming”, underlined Michel Bastien, Tembec Vice-President, SPF, Quebec Division, Forest Products Group. Eliminating 2.8 million liters of fuel used annually for heating will reduce the Béarn operations greenhouse gas emissions by 88%. Tembec Executive Vice President and President, Specialty Cellulose and Chemical Group, Yvon Pelletier, explained that “the long-term viability of the Témiscaming cellulose plant is tied partly to the sawmill in Béarn. Because this mill produces quality wood chips and quality biomass, and because it operates nearby, it qualifies as a supplier of choice for the cellulose plant. The Béarn mill therefore enables the Témiscaming plant to reduce transportation costs for these supplies. ” “Tembec is among the world’s leaders in Specialty Pulp. This sector is currently one of the most promising within our Company,” stated James Lopez, Tembec President and CEO. “The project announced today, with active support from the Quebec Government, will allow us the opportunity to continue focusing on higher margins.” Tembec’s sawmill in Béarn employs 135 people and ships its lumber within Canada and to the United States, mainly to the Province of Quebec, Ontario and the Great Lakes area. It also provides wood chips as raw material and biomass as a source of energy to the Tembec specialty cellulose plant in Témiscaming