Wildfires in Western Canada continue to disrupt Canfor Corp. CFP-T operations as the company reported a loss of $43.9-million in the second quarter.
With new records set in both Alberta and B.C. for total hectares burned, the company said operational constraints are expected to continue well into the third quarter of 2023. The extreme conditions are also disrupting the company’s access to fibre as well as harvest and hauling activities, Canfor said.
“While it is too early to determine the long-term fibre supply impacts, we have seen significant short-term disruptions to our operations, including a three-week curtailment of our facility in Fox Creek, Alta. in the second quarter,” said Canfor president and chief executive Donald Kayne on a call with analysts.
The company said it will assess the full extent of the fires’ impact on its operations, including sustainable timber supplies and future harvesting plans, over the coming months.
The loss in the second quarter was down from the $373.8-million profit Canfor reported during the second quarter last year. However, it was an improvement from the first quarter, when Canfor reported a loss of $142-million.
Declining global pulp market conditions weighed heavily on its results in the second quarter, the company said in a news release Thursday, as did pressure on global lumber market fundamentals and pricing.
European and U.S. South operations were strong, helping partially offset weaker results from the company’s Western Canadian lumber business, Mr. Kayne said in the release.
Sales during the second quarter were $1.45-billion, down from $2.17-billion a year earlier.
The recent strike at B.C. ports will likely weigh on Canfor’s results in the third quarter, said RBC analyst Paul Quinn in a note.
The strike “severely impacted” the supply chain for subsidiary Canfor Pulp Products Inc., said the company’s president and CEO Kevin Edgson on the analyst call. Around 70 per cent of the company’s pulp is shipped through the affected ports, and so the strike led to a week-long curtailment at the Northwood pulp mill.
“We anticipate the supply chain challenges to persist through much of the third quarter,” Mr. Edgson said.
Canfor Pulp reported a net loss of $28.4-million in the second quarter, down from a loss of $5.7-million a year earlier. Sales were $249.5-million, down from $288.9-million last year.
Overall, Canfor Corp.’s second-quarter earnings were better than expected, said Mr. Quinn, noting that the company expects lumber markets to benefit from a slight improvement in residential construction activity in the third quarter.
High interest rates are expected to keep existing home inventories at low levels of supply, Canfor said in its release.
“It is anticipated that new home builders will continue to offer concessions, however, in an attempt to potentially relieve some affordability pressures for prospective homeowners. As a result, residential construction activity is projected to experience a slight improvement through the third quarter of 2023 as the underlying demand for housing in North America remains.”