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Message from the Director
The Pulp & Paper Centre
Comes of Age
The Pulp & Paper Centre at the University
of Toronto, which exists within the umbrella of the Department,
was founded in 1987 by Professor Doug Reeve, who was the Director
for fifteen years. Although the Centre has grown and changed with
the challenges that face the industry, its mission has remained
the same: it continues to facilitate partnerships between the University
and the pulp and paper industry in order to provide excellence in
education, research, and information transfer.
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| (l to r):Associate Director
Ning Yan, Director Honghi Tran and Associate Director Ramin
Farnood |
The Pulp & Paper Centre is
currently supported by three core companies: Bowater Canadian Forest
Products Inc., ERCO Worldwide, and Tembec Inc. Since 2004, it has
been directed by Professor Honghi Tran, together with Professors
Ramin Farnood and Ning Yan (Forestry). Embracing the new biological
and hi-tech tools in a multidisciplinary approach, the Centre has
broadened its activities to include biorefinery research projects
which seek to convert forest biomass and mill effluents into alternative
sources of energy, including methane and bio-ethanol.
Research within the Pulp &
Paper Centre is organized around five groups: Environment,
led by Professor Grant Allen; Energy and Chemical Recovery, led
by Professor Hongi Tran; Lignocellulosic Fibres, led by Professor
Mohini Sain; Surface Science of Paper, led by Professors Ramin Farnood
and Doug Reeve; and Biotechnology, led by Professor Emma Master.
Cutting-edge projects are carried out with the support of three
industrial consortia and various grants. In the past year alone,
a total of $3.2 million in research funding was provided by NSERC
and over thirty pulp and paper related companies in Canada, the
United States, Finland, Sweden, Japan, Brazil, and New Zealand.
In addition to working with industry partners, the
Centre has collaborated with numerous universities and research
institutions, both domestic and international. It also actively
participates in the Canadian Forest Biorefinery Network established
by Pulp and Paper Innovation in Education and Research (PAPIER),
an organization consisting of industry sponsored PAPRICAN and the
seven pulp and paper centres in Canadian universities. PAPIER allows
its members to combine industry experience and research on a national
scale to get the best out of the forest.
The Pulp & Paper Centre
encourages extensive student involvement at both the graduate and
the undergraduate level, drawing upon an impressive pool of talent:
51 graduate students, 28 undergraduate students, 25 associated staff,
and 46 faculty from several departments within the University of
Toronto. The graduate student training and professional development
programs are a core activity. Students have enthusiastically participated
in the Industrial Internship program, which allows selected candidates
to work in a pulp and paper mill for two months in their research
areas. They have also organized many technology tours, both within
Canada and to the United States, Scandinavia, Japan, and Brazil,
and they are planning a tour to China this summer. The vibrant program
mounted by TISCUT enables students to develop outstanding research
and leadership skills so that they become active members of the
pulp and paper community.
In recent years, the Centre and its faculty have received
broad recognition, winning a 2003 NSERC Synergy Award for Innovation
with ERCO Worldwide. In addition, Professor David Goring was inducted
into the Pulp and Paper Industry Hall of Fame in 2006, Professor
Honghi Tran, recently appointed to the Frank Dottori Chair in Pulp
& Paper Engineering, was the recipient of the prestigious TAPPI
Beloit Engineering Award (2006), and Professor Doug Reeve was recently
awarded the 2007 John S. Bates Memorial Award, the highest honour
bestowed on an individual by the Pulp and Paper Technical Association
of Canada.
On July 1, 2007, the PPC will celebrate a milestone:
twenty years of self-supporting operation. The Centre will continue
to make flexibility its major operating principle in order to keep
up with the challenges of a post-Kyoto world and help transform
the pulp and paper industry into a sustainable industry of the future.
(Article published in INTERFACES, Vol.5, No.
1, Spring 2007, Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry)
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