Thursday, May 1st, 2008


from the AP wire service via Forbes online:

Harvard endowment wants to take over bankrupt Pacific Lumber

Harvard University’s endowment said Thursday it’s interested in buying more than 200,000 acres of timberlands in California as part of a plan to take over logging company Pacific Lumber Co. and bring it out of bankruptcy.

An attorney for the university endowment, the country’s largest, said it’s ready to offer a bankruptcy plan for Pacific Lumber. He said the offer would top the price offered by hedge fund Marathon Asset Management, although the plan would otherwise be similar to Marathon’s.

“Harvard is a serious institution. It has $5 billion invested in forestry right now,” Harvard lawyer Steven Hoort told Judge Richard Schmidt of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Corpus Christi, Texas.

The rest of the story is here>>>

thanks to Greg King of the NEC for the tip…

A quick thought, isn’t it kind of late for them to be jumping into the game? But, I guess being from Harvard and all they must know that sort of thing.

update:

As suggested by an anonymous commenter, we looked at reporter Mike Geniella’s take on the story in the Press Demo:

…in a surprise move Thursday morning, attorneys for holders of the $714 million bonded indebtedness announced that legendary California timberman Archie “Red” Emmerson may join with Texas banker Andrew Beal and Harvard’s endowment fund to make an even higher offer.

As envisioned under that plan Emmerson’s Sierra Pacific Industries, California’s single largest landowner, would take over the Scotia mill complex operation in partnership with Harvard and Beal. Beal has said he’s willing to put up $603 million cash for Pacific Lumber’s assets.

There’s no mention of Rob Arkley, (as suggested by the anon), but Geniella does quote Forbes (not from the story above) on the billionaire status of Emmerson and Beal:

Forbes says Red Emmerson, a Humboldt County native who still wears blue jeans and drives a Chevy pick-up, is worth slightly more: $1.5 billion [Forbes actually says $2.1 billion]. Emmerson’s family owned Sierra Pacific is believed to be the nation’s third largest private landowner, with 1.8 million acres of timberlands.

Dallas banker Beal’s worth also is an estimated $1.5 billion. And in Texas, Beal’s passion for poker is widely known. He’s sat down to some of the highest-stakes private games ever played, according to the 2005 book The Professor, the Banker and the Suicide King

Over at the Community Forest Team blog, David Simpson has touched on Beal’s poker style strategy, but he has not yet discussed the Harvard/Emmerson entry into what David calls The Beal Deal.

A Loleta resident called the Journal today to tell us she had seen black smoke “belching” from the stacks of the PG&E power plant early yesterday afternoon. About an hour later she called the North Coast Unified Air Quality Management District to file a complaint — the NCUAQMD told her they weren’t aware of a recent emission, so they sent a field officer to the power plant to check things out.

It turns out that PG&E was testing their backup fuel for Units I and II. Normally the power plant runs off of natural gas, but in the case of a gas shortage the plant is capable of running off of fuel oil. Periodically they test that capability.

PG&E spokesperson Jana Morris explained that the opacity test, designed to check for particulate in the plant’s backup oil, is routine and required by the air quality board. The test began on Tuesday with Unit I. What happened yesterday was an “operation error,” Morris said, a valve was out of position in Unit II. There were two emissions of black smoke from the plant, according to Morris — one in the early morning and one in the afternoon. The second occurred when tuning was taking place on the out-of-position valve, she said.

Lloyd Green, a field officer with the NCUAQMD, said that the air quality management district was aware of both emissions. The first occurred at 6:19 a.m. and lasted three minutes. The second started at 12:19 and lasted two minutes. According to Green PG&E is allowed up to three minutes of similar emission every hour, but the black smoke that could be seen yesterday was not a normal occurrence. “It threw a bit more particulate out there than was normal,” Green said, “but for the short term I wouldn’t be worrying about it.”

Image from www.ear.eu.int. (It’s not the Eureka plant.)