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Renewing Economic Hopes in the North Country
By Laura Knoy on Friday, May 5, 2006.
Saturday, the Fraser Papers pulp mill in Berlin closes its doors, leaving the North Country without a huge market for the area's low-grade wood. The dying paper manufacturing industry has many saying now is the time to start thinking about how the North Country can use their natural resources to develop a renewable energy industry. Already, Public Service of New Hampshire and several other electric companies are knocking on the North Country's door, eager to build a wood-burning power plant. Other ideas have been thrown out there too like producing fuel pellets made from sawdust and even ethanol. We'll look at whether the Fraser Papers pulp mill has a renewable future. Laura is joined by Barbara Tetreault, Reporter for the Berlin Daily Sun. We will also hear from Bob Danderson, Mayor of Berlin, Jasen Stock, Executive Director of the New Hampshire Timberland Owners Association, and Peter Riviere, Executive Director of the Coos Economic Development Corp. Web resources:
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As a NH entrepreneur, I think the best thing that could happen is for both mills to shut down. I would't even have considered moving my business up there if the mills were still operational. I wouldn't want to subject my employees to the smell and the poloution. The future of Berlin is not with one big new company coming in, but with alot of little ones like mine that will diversify the economy. We'll start up an office in Berlin next month with probably no more than 4 employees, but we fully expect to grow to 50 in five years.
Katie Delahaye Paine
CEO
KDPaine & Partners, LLC
Durham, NH