Stora Enso Q4 2022 report presentation. Our purpose, do good for people and the planet, is more important now than ever before. We need to look after our people, the communities in which we operate, and the company. By replacing fossil-based materials with our renewable products, we can leverage on this opportunity for long-term earnings growth and can, at the same time, positively contribute to mitigating climate change. Sustainability is deeply embedded in our strategy and corporate culture. This is what drives both our underlying performance and our opportunities for innovation and growth. I will now give you an overview of our fourth quarter and full year 2022 performance. Today, I'm most proud of that we have delivered the best full year financial performance in 22 years, despite all market disruptions and challenges that we see around us.
At the same time, we have been proactive and continue to deliver on our strategic roadmap. As we're all aware, the inflationary cost pressures escalated towards the end of the year. We could only partly mitigate them in Q4. If we look at our divisions, they give a mixed picture where Biomaterials was the star performer, while we saw continued market slowdown in both containerboard and sawn wood, a trend that really started in the middle of last year. We have also been busy with the reshaping of the business and positioning it for future growth to drive outperformance over the cycle, where our target is to grow more than 5%. Some examples of progress on recent key initiatives are that this month we have completed the De Jong acquisition and have started the integration process.
We also completed the majority of divestments and dissolved the Paper division and started a process to divest the consumer board packaging site and Forestry operations at our Beihai site in China. After a positive outcome of the feasibility study at our Oulu site, we are investing to build a cost leading consumer board line from a paper machine conversion. We continue also our collaborations and partnerships and have recently partnered with Polestar to contribute to their project to create a climate neutral car for 2030 with our Lignode product. To create further shareholder value, the board is proposing an all-time high dividend of EUR 0.60 per share. Let's take now a look at the financials, Let's start with the full year of 2022. Sales increased by 15%, which was the highest annual sales since 2007.
The positive impact from significantly higher sales prices and active mix management, was partly offset by the adverse impact from structural changes, such as closing of, two major paper sites and our exit from Russia. Operational EBIT grew by 24% to nearly EUR 1.9 billion and as I just mentioned, the strongest since 2000, and with an all-time high EBIT margin of 16.2%. The Operational Return on Capital Employed, excluding forest, 30.9%, which is well above our long-term target of more than 13%. Looking now at the fourth quarter, sales increased by 5%. We had the highest sales prices in all divisions except in Wood Products, and the top line was also supported by active mix management and a stronger U.S. dollar.
The operational EBIT of EUR 355 million, however, decreased by nearly 17% with an EBIT margin of 12.4%. There are several reasons behind this drop. To name a few, we have the exit from our Russian operations, which reduced the result by EUR 20 million, while the escalated variable costs, especially in energy, chemicals and logistics, had a negative impact of almost EUR 270 million. Lower volumes, which reduced operational EBIT by EUR 72 million. We had fixed costs increased by EUR 85 million, mainly due to the scheduled annual maintenance shutdowns. We had the two major sites of Packaging Materials being shut down this quarter. The operational return on capital employed excluding forest was 13.2%, just above our target of more than 13%.
I will now show you a year-on-year comparison for the second half of last year on the following slide. As you can see in this slide, we show the third and fourth quarter combined in a year-on-year comparison for 2021. You can see that the development during the second half of last year showed a similar trend as in 2021. The maintenance costs in the second half of 2021 were EUR 314 million and just slightly higher at EUR 330 million in the second half last year.
The main difference is that in 2022, the third quarter was exceptionally high, while the fourth quarter was exceptionally low in comparison to 2021, when both quarters were more stable quarter-on-quarter. In the second half of 2022, this had the effect of a lumpiness quarter-on-quarter, as many variable costs, such as energy and chemicals escalated, while at the same time, we have four of our largest packaging material sites in annual maintenance shutdowns, including two of our largest consumer board sites. In Q4 2022, the maintenance impact was EUR 30 million higher than in Q3 2022, and year-on-year, the maintenance impact was EUR 34 million higher in Q4 2022. The situation in the fourth quarter, therefore, impacted negatively with both higher costs and lower volumes. However, the impact on EBIT over the second half was relatively flat.
Let's now move into some of the strategic parts that we've been working on. The acquisition of De Jong Packaging Group was announced in September last year, and I'm pleased that we have now completed this month, this acquisition and can welcome them as part of Stora Enso. We have started the integration process. We are full focused on that, and it is proceeding according to our plan. This acquisition will accelerate revenue growth and build market share in renewable packaging in Western European markets and key consumer and customer segments and double the sales from Packaging Solutions division. The De Jong Packaging Group, just to remind you, is based in Netherlands and is one of the largest corrugated packaging producers in the Benelux countries, with 17 sites across Benelux, Germany, and the U.K.
De Jong sales were approximately EUR 1 billion and approximately EUR 114 million EBITDA in 2022. Once ramped up, our corrugating capacity will increase by approximately 1,200 million cubic meters to more than 2,000 million cubic meters. Sales for the Packaging Materials division will nearly double. Packaging Solutions division will nearly double. We expect to achieve EUR 30 million of annual synergies over the business cycle, built up over the coming three years, and an additional annual EBITDA increase of more than EUR 40 million from 2025 from these ongoing projects. The two projects that we are currently working on are expansion projects, one in De Lier, Holland, and one in U.K.
Furthermore, the acquired business has an excellent fit with a possible conversion of a paper machine line that we have in Langerbrugge to recycled containerboard line in Belgium, which is currently in a feasibility study mode. We have also for some time now communicated that the structurally declining Paper business is not a key area for our long-term growth agenda for Stora Enso. We have instead focused our financial and operational resources and also capital allocation on growing in renewable packaging, sustainable Building Solutions, and Biomaterials innovations. In spring last year, we announced that four of our five paper sites were entering a divestment process. We have agreed divestments for a total enterprise value of EUR 378 million.
We have completed the Nymölla site divestment, which was sold to Sylvamo, and the Maxau site will be divested to Schwarz Group and the Hylte site to Sweden Timber. Both of those are expected to be completed during the first part of this year. The divestment process for Anjala site was discontinued and is remained retained in Stora Enso, continuing with its paper production and serving its current customers. The Langerbrugge site, as I mentioned on the previous slide, was not included in the divestment plan, and the ongoing feasibility study of that site is expected to be finalized during the first half of this year. We've also started a new divestment initiative, and let's take a closer look at that. As you are aware, we started a sales process at the end of last year to divest our Beihai site in China.
This divestment would include both the industrial site and the Forestry operations. Just as a reminder, Beihai has an annual capacity of mechanical pulp of 250,000 tons and 550,000 tons of consumer board. The Forestry operations consists of 73,000 hectares of leased eucalyptus plantations. Stora Enso's ownership of this site is approximately 80%, and we have at this point, not any committed timeline for this divestment process. The reason for this decision is that we want to focus on long-term profitable growth where economies of scale can be achieved. We see that we have better options in other opportunities within the company. We will be able to allocate capital and resources for growth in other existing sites, such as the Oulu site in Finland, for instance.
China and other Asian markets are important to us, both on, kind of, our existing and also new customers in this market. We will continue to serve them from our other global sites, and we still have three packaging sites in China in the Packaging Solutions division. I will now talk a little bit more about how we further can strengthen our growth strategy and also learning and reach new markets and collaborate through collaborations. It is important to, in order to innovate, to have strong ecosystems with collaborations and partnering and joint development. These are becoming more and more critical for companies. Not only to expand business, but also to share knowledge, speed to market, and influence the development of different innovations. In Biomaterials innovation, we are actively developing our value chain ecosystem to build a path for green batteries.
The latest one being the announcement of our partnership with Polestar, an electric performance car brand, where Stora Enso will contribute to their Polestar 0 project, which is a climate neutral car for 2030, using our Lignode product. We're also progressing with the ongoing feasibility study for the first industrial scale production of Lignode at our Sunila site in Finland, where we have our current pilot facility. We are, of course, constantly monitoring the development of battery technologies within wood-based materials. I've already mentioned our investment in a new consumer board line at our Oulu site, and we are now moving ahead with the investment of around EUR 1 billion to build the most cost competitive folding boxboard and consumer board machine in Europe.
The targeted end user segments are food and beverage packaging for mainly Europe and North America. This production is estimated to start in early 2025, with an expected annual sales of approximately EUR 800 million. In building solutions, we have launched our construction solution, Sylva. Simply explained, it is a prefabricated and custom-made building kit, delivered just in time to a building site. These modules, they help builders to enable faster construction, reduced cost, more efficient use of raw material, and of course, less CO2 emissions than concrete and steel and other available applications on the market. You can see here on a picture an example of a prefabricated element being lifted and ready to go on a top of a building. Let's now take a short look at our financial targets.
All long-term group level targets were exceeded in the fourth quarter and for the full year of 2022, including the dividend. In the quarter, it was only Biomaterials and the Forest division who outperformed their targets. Packaging Materials and Wood Products division had the biggest drops. For the full year, Biomaterials, Wood Products, and forest outperformed their targets, while Packaging Solutions and Paper underperformed, and Packaging Materials was, with a small improvement, not far from their long-term target. Now I hand over to you, Seppo, to give some more flavor on our financials..
Thank you, Annica. Let's look at the reach between Q4 2021 and Q4 2022. As you can see, we had higher prices during the quarter, but they were offset by increased variable costs, especially energy, logistics, and chemicals. Also, maintenance costs played a role here, as Annica already mentioned earlier, and maintenance costs were then EUR 34 million higher year-on-year. That is visible in fixed costs as well as in the volume development for the quarter. We have put in place a number of actions to mitigate when it comes to inflationary pressures, that is cost control, pricing actions, capacity management, as well as working on sourcing and logistics. Let's move to the divisions, let's look at the Packaging Materials division first.
In Consumer Board business, we have implemented price increases to mitigate cost inflation. Container Board market demand has remained weak. Sales were up 6% year-on-year, reaching EUR 1,127 million, mainly driven by higher board prices. Operational EBIT was down EUR 102 million year-on-year at EUR 31 million level. There we could see increased short-term operating costs due to annual maintenance shutdowns, as mentioned earlier, and we had maintenance shutdowns at our four large sites, which is good to keep in mind when looking at the result development. On top of that, we had variable cost inflationary pressures during the quarter. These variable costs and lower volumes had an effect on margins that were squeezed during the quarter.
Operational return on capital was at 3.6% for the quarter. Packaging Solutions division, where sales and profitability were impacted by the exit from Russian operations, as was visible in the previous quarters already. We had some high inflationary pressures there as well. Sales were down 16% year-on-year at EUR 179 million level, affected by, like mentioned, Russian units divestments. We had higher sales prices in the corrugated packaging operations, despite the softer market conditions. Operational EBIT was down EUR 13 million during the quarter, again, negatively impacted by exit from Russia and higher costs relating to investments in growing the new businesses that we have today in Packaging Solutions division.
That is something when it comes to segment reporting that we are planning to move to segment other going forward in order to improve transparency in Packaging Solutions division business. Operational return on capital at negative 1.4%. Biomaterials division, where we had all-time high quarterly sales and profitability reached through record high pricing and effective good operational performance. Sales were up 32%, reaching all-time high for the quarter at EUR 649 million, driven by strong prices and deliveries and good performance in fiber sales and operational performance. EBIT was up 49%, also at all-time high when it comes to the quarter at EUR 249 million. That was reflection of higher sales prices and positive foreign exchange impact, fully offsetting higher costs that we were seeing in the business and input prices.
Operating return on capital at 35%, that is also clearly above the long-term target of 15% for the division. In Wood Products division, there was a rapid market decline in sawn goods, but continuous stability in building solutions business. Sales were down 7% year-on-year at EUR 471 million. Construction market was impacted by market slowdown. We can see fewer building permits and projects that are started currently. Lower sales mainly were impacted also by lower prices in sawn goods, sawn wood and exit from the Russian operations earlier last year. Like I said, good and positive thing is the stable demand in building solutions has continued despite the challenging market conditions.
Operating EBIT was down EUR 103 million year-on-year at negative EUR 14 million, and lower sales prices and increased costs for logistics, electricity, and raw materials were affecting the profitability and margins in the business. Operating return on capital negative at 7.5% for the quarter. In Forest division, wood demand and prices remained on a high level, and sales were up 11% year-on-year, driven by increased wood demand and higher prices. Sales were at EUR 664 million level. Wood markets were tight both in Finland and Sweden, but they were mitigated by flexible sourcing and our strong sourcing organization in Baltic countries, Finland and Sweden.
Operating EBIT was up 30% year-on-year, reaching EUR 62 million, supported by good operational performance as well as positive impact from land sales in Sweden. Operating return on capital at 4.4%, above long-term target of 3.5%, despite the higher fair value of the Nordic Forest assets. Paper Division, they will significantly improve profitability due to business turnaround after the restructuring that we implemented the year before. Sales were up 9% year-on-year, reaching EUR 424 million. We had higher sales prices for the products, strong performance continued throughout the year. Volumes were impacted somewhat by scheduled maintenance shutdowns during the quarter. Operating EBIT was up EUR 59 million year-on-year, reaching EUR 49 million, we had good high sales prices that more than offset higher variable costs.
However, cash flow after investments was negative by 0.7%, impacted by restructuring provision payouts and transaction costs related to the announced divestments. Restructuring relates to Kvarnsveden and Veitsiluoto closures a year earlier. Also you have seen the release that we are now stopping reporting paper as a separate segment going forward as we are ready with the divestment process. Couple words on the fair valuation of the forests. Like indicated earlier, we have now changed to market transaction-based fair valuation also in Tornator in Finland. Fair value of the forests were increased by EUR 8.3 billion from EUR 8.0 billion a quarter earlier, and this is equivalent to EUR 10.52 per share.
Change of the valuation method from discounted cash flow to market transaction-based method in Tornator in Finland resulted in a EUR 265 million positive impact quarter-on-quarter. There was also higher market transaction prices in Sweden, but that effect was offset by negative development at foreign exchange rate between Swedish crown and euro. Fair value for plantations decreased due to the higher discount rates used. Energy self-sufficiency is moving up with Olkiluoto Three coming closer to operational stage now, and we expect that total energy-wise, we are 75% self-sufficient going forward, and electricity is increasing from 68% to 79%. Related to CapEx for the year that has now started, CapEx is up from slightly below EUR 800 million levels to EUR 1.2 billion-EUR 1.3 billion range.
CapEx increases is driven by consumer board investment in Oulu in Finland that also Annica was referring to earlier. We have started now to move forward with the investment that was communicated and decided earlier this year. Dividend and dividend proposal. We have now proposal from the board to increase to all-time highest dividend of EUR 0.60 per share, and this is bringing our dividend back to growth track that we have been showing since 2008 after two years of lower dividend due to COVID-19 pandemic that was affecting the economy globally. Segment reporting changes that we have announced earlier today as well. As of January 1st this year, we are first of all discontinuing Paper division as a separate segment.
Mäntsälä and Hylte paper sites that are divested and where the deals are signed will be part of segment other until completion of the divestments, and this is expected during the first half of this year. Langerbrugge and Anjala sites that we are retaining in Stora Enso, they are reported now as part of Packaging Materials division. The new businesses that we have earlier reported and had as part of Packaging Solutions are moved to segment other. This we are doing in order to input transparency of Packaging Solutions division going forward, also now that De Jong is part of Packaging Solutions. Restated figures shall be issued for the new structure prior to first quarter report. Back to you, Annica, and your guidance.
Thanks, Seppo. Let's take a look at the year ahead. If we look at market conditions and inflationary pressures, they are expected to be more challenging in 2023 than we experienced in 2022. Therefore, the variable cost ex-inflation is also expected to remain high. We expect the operational EBIT for the full year of 2023 to be lower than the record high full year of 2022 that ended up in EUR 1,891 million. We have been and are continually taking actions to manage volatility, and as Seppo mentioned, we work diligently to protect our margins, working with pricing, managing our product mix, inventories, as well, of course, as actions in sourcing and logistics.
We have also reinforced our cost control across the company and will continue to take active actions also going forward until we recover our profitability. As we've mentioned before, we benefit from our high self-sufficiency relative to other companies. In wood, we are 30% self-sufficient, in e-energy, we are 72% self-sufficient, well-hedged for the coming years. Since I joined as the CEO of Stora Enso now some three years ago, we have taken extensive steps to also reshape the business that we have. The company is now financially, operationally, and strategically in much better shape to handle market fluctuations. At the same time, we have the muscles to invest for growth in renewable packaging, in sustainable building solutions, and in Biomaterials innovations.
Moving over now to the outlook. If I go into a little bit more details around each division for Q1, we see that in Packaging Materials, the overall demand for consumer board is expected to remain stable, while the overall containerboard demand is expected to remain weak. This has to do with the consumer consumption. Packaging Solutions demand for corrugated packaging is expected to weaken in Europe, while pulp demand is expected to be more or less on par with the previous year. In Wood Products, the demand for sawn wood is expected to be significantly weaker, especially in Europe, with the overseas market remaining stable.
Lastly, for the Forest division, the pulpwood demand is expected to remain stable, while demand for sawlogs is expected to decrease in the first quarter. We're now coming close to the end of the presentation, but I will first just take a chance to summarize. Then Seppo and I look forward to taking your questions. Our performance in 2022 demonstrates, of course, the strength of our leading market positions and our ability to be proactive and agile. Quarterly, all-time high results we have experienced in Biomaterials with continued slowdown in containerboard and sawn wood. We are investing in organic and acquisitive growth and entering partnerships all to drive outperformance over the cycle. The board proposes an all-time high dividend of EUR 0.6 per share.
All in all, I'm very happy that we are delivering the best full year financial performance in 2022, despite that the Q4 market challenges were more difficult comparably to previous quarters. With that, I would like to hand over and take your questions. Thank you very much.
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To enter the queue, if you wish to withdraw your question, please dial star five again on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Lars Kjellberg from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Thank you. I'll just start with inflationary pressures. It feels as if the marginal costs for your competitors is starting to come down, but you're talking about more challenging pressures in 2023 over 2022. If you can sort of elaborate a bit what that is happening. Is that due to hedges rolling over or is this really focused on the wood costs that we're seeing rising sharply in the Nordics in particular in Europe? Also on the pricing component, considering now we are in softer markets, where do you see opportunities to move prices? If we just move very quick to De Jong Packaging, appreciate the strategic move, the growth ambition in that business, though.
I just wanted to ask, how do we get to a compound annual growth rate around 20% to enable you to utilize that incremental volume in a market that maybe growth grows at 3%? How quickly do you believe you're going to be to fill that machine or those incremental capacities? The final point, I guess, on Beihai, of course, in the day, this is a high-profile project. China is a growth market. I appreciate you need potential capital release to invest in other projects, but what is really going in Beihai that wants you to get out of it, and not pursue that growth that is within that country?
Okay, thanks, Lars. If I start with the inflation drivers before I hand over to Annica to cover your other questions. We see pressures especially on energy side, which also leads to pressures and increases on chemicals. I think those are the two biggest drivers going forward. Obviously, energy price and energy market is very volatile, as you know, and that is having an effect, even though that we have pretty high energy self-sufficiency rate, but still we are exposed. Then wood market is a third element when it comes to inflation pressures, where we see that the log market is more sort of calm, but especially pulpwood market, we see pressures from energy wood usage having effect on the market.
Annica, shall you take the pricing side?
Yes. Well, if we look at kind of, We don't comment on pricing in general, but where there is good and stable demand, we are able to have discussions with our customers to compensate for the inflationary pressures that we have, and we do that. If we look of course that the market is weaker, then it's more difficult to push through price increases, and then we need to work with products, with balancing inventories, and making sure that we run our capacities according to market demand. This is the general kind of comment. If we look at containerboard, for instance, there we could see that the market was significantly weaker in quarter four. We expect a weaker also quarter one on containerboard side.
There are a lot of inventories out on the market, there the possibility to do adjustments on pricing is harder. Other areas like consumer board is more stable. There, we have the constant discussions, and we renegotiate our contracts as they expire with our customers. Generally, we have most contract discussions in Q3, Q4, of course we have some also for Q1 when going forward. In Wood Products, if we look at the market there, demand, as I mentioned, was very weak with significant price decreases in Q4. On European market, it was 30% on sawn, 20% on sawn goods and overseas almost 30%.
Of course, you understand that it is a quite challenging environment, for Wood Products, and that's why we did not deliver a satisfactory result for that segment. On Paper, there has been quite a good pricing situation for quarter four. We have been able to increase pricing. There is a balance in the market, but going forward, that situation also becomes more difficult if the macroeconomics impact and demand starts decreasing. Now looking at, lastly, of course, pulp prices, if I may comment on that, we see that mostly, as we all know, pulp is guided by how the Chinese market operates. We expect, of course, the opening of the China as a country to contribute to increased consumption and then also continued good demand on pulp.
We have seen some decreases of pulp prices during quarter four. If I look at kind of the demand going forward on pulp, we see continued strong demand for tissue and fluff, where we are main producers in Europe, and then a stable demand for the other grades. Here also, of course, the U.S. dollar has a big impact on the results. If I say a few words about De Jong, as you know, a very successful company in the region that they are operating. It's also a very good synergetic asset to have in combination with our site in Ostrołęka already. We can also make choices about how we integrate our own containerboard production together with the De Jong new corrugating capacity.
Of course, I think it's a good market situation to do investments and build the machines now when the cycle is a little bit slower, and then we can start up once the cycle turns. I expect the segments where we operate with De Jong, which is an agricultural sector, for instance, serving all the Netherlands or majority of Netherlands agricultural sector that's picking up seasonally. It's stronger in springtime and summertime compared to quarter four, for instance. I think this is the acquisition that is very synergetic to our existing assets. As I mentioned, we have the opportunity also with the forward-looking Langerbrugge conversion to do more.
It's two to three years process before the investments are ramped up.
Yes, of course.
it also gives time for market to grow further.
Yes. If we look at Beihai, the investment as such has delivered on the capacities, on the kind of product mix on the machine. Yes, it is a growing market in China, but we also believe in economies of scale for the sites. We would see that in order to be able to build a much stronger position in China and reach economies of scale, that we would need to invest more there. When we have done our analysis, we have come to the conclusion that we have better options elsewhere. This allows us to focus on better optionalities that we have inside of the rest of the company. That's why we have taken the decision to exit Beihai.
As I mentioned, we will continue to serve our customers from our other very cost competitive and global sites that we have within the company and capture the growth in that sense.
You have to make strategic choices. You have to remember that we are investing EUR 1 billion in Oulu. We have feasibility study going on in Langerbrugge, and we need to also take care of the balance sheet and where we put the capital and where we can release capital for that growth.
Just to follow on that one. Is there a pain level that you need to essentially go ahead with the Beihai mill? I'm thinking about Anjala, you keeping that mill because I assume that there's no bidders for the asset at a reasonable price. Do we have a similar situation at Beihai?
I didn't catch your question.
There's a breaking-
No, Yeah, I'm saying if there's a minimum price level, essentially, at the Beihai for you to be willing to let go of the asset similar to Anjala, which you obviously decided to keep because lack of demand at a reasonable price, I would assume.
Yeah. Now I heard your question. Sorry. I believe there is quite a big difference between Anjala and Beihai in terms of how new the assets are and what prospects there are of good buyers. They are not really comparable. Of course, we will make sure that we get the best value out of that divestment process with Beihai.
Very good. Thank you.
The next question comes from Joffrey Bellicha-Meller from BofA Securities. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone, thank you for taking my question. I have three, actually I'd like to ask, please. The first one is, looking at the latest performance of Wood Products, what are the measures you are taking to bring EBIT back to a positive level? Have you implemented any production curtailments in Q1 at this stage? The second one is on Beihai. Very clear message in your previous answers. The only question I have left over on this one is what would be the estimated EBIT generation delta between the future Oulu site and the current Beihai site? If you can guide us on that, please, that would be super helpful. The third question is on Lignode. Could you update us a bit further on the feasibility study and the current customer interest you have there?
Obviously, we saw the Pulpex partnership. Did you receive any firm orders from this partnership yet for the Sunila pilot plant, for example? Thank you very much.
Yes. Thank you for your questions. On Wood Products, we could see the decline in the market starting already during Q3. We have already been taking a lot of actions on that. As I said, inventory management, taking down costs. We have had furlough negotiations with the unions to also close down when the capacity is not needed to reduce cost levels. We've done this in several countries where we operate. We continue, of course, to try to adapt to the changed reality of the inflationary pressures. I believe that Q4 and Q1 are probably some of the bottom levels that we see in kind of construction industry and so on.
Normally, many companies choose to take down their inventories during the end of the year. That was something that we saw happened during Q4 in Wood Products. All the actions that we mentioned, in terms of cost reductions and so on, are constantly taken.
You have to remember that Q1 is always lowest when it comes to construction business and Wood Products. That is, obviously having effect as well.
As we also mentioned, we could see that the two different businesses, Building Solutions, longer projects where they kind of have longer horizons, that pipeline stayed relatively stable comparably. Then the business that decreased very quickly was the traditional sawn goods business. We have to remember that we had exceptional years the latest years in this area with some tremendous results. A normalization was in the cards sooner or later.
This also, I think, shows the strength of the building solutions where we are investing and see the growth opportunities. It's less volatile business, as we have said all the time. It's still relatively small share of the total, but that's stabilizing factor going forward.
Yeah. that is why our strategy is to-.
Yeah
-grow that part of the business, with, for instance, these prefabricated modules in the Sylva concept. On the Beihai question, we don't comment between individual sites. Sorry, we cannot help you with that. If we look at Lignode then, we have several ongoing partnerships. Our focus and Polestar and Northvolt, as we've mentioned before, are the ones that we can make public. What we focus now is in parallel that we are doing our feasibility study using the knowledge that we get from these customer trials that we're doing, because we're using the pilot material to deliver customer product to these and test them and make sure that we get the qualification right. This information goes into the feasibility study so we can make the design of the factory according to tailored needs of customers.
The focus is now, up until we actually build the site, or make the decision for the first site, in Lignode, that we build up the customer offtake agreements. We know that we have enough volumes to ramp up the new production site once decision is taken.
Thank you very much, Annica and Seppo for the answers. Just a quick follow-up on Lignode. I was wondering if Polestar would eventually participate in a joint venture with you as this was your initial plan for Lignode. Thanks.
We have not discussed a Joint Venture at this point with them. Our main target, as I say right now, is to make sure that we fill up the pipeline of volumes so that if and when we start up a new factory, we will be ready to start producing. This is what we put our main focus right now. We have parked the JV question for time being.
Great. Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Cole Hathorn from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
My question, I'd just like some clarity on the Packaging Materials division. Could you give us an estimate of how much the maintenance impact was in that division, either quarter-on-quarter or, you know, the benefit that we should see into Q1? I'm just trying to get the run rate of, you know, what the underlying profitability of the Packaging Materials division should be. I know you called out that there was more maintenance in Q4 than you originally kind of guided to. Just wondering how big that impact is.
I can start with the general comments and then hand over to Seppo. The plant maintenance was not different than we originally had planned. The sites that were down were Skoghall, it was Imatra, Varkaus, Fors, and Maxau. The four first sites, they are packaging material sites. Imatra and Skoghall, for those of you who know, are the two big consumer board sites. Of course, having annual plant shutdowns with them in the same quarter had a big impact for the quarter. Actually, it's quite good to have your shutdowns in quarter four, especially when energy prices are high. Of course, the effect for the division as a whole is big when these two sites have shuts. If you remember also, we announced capacity investment in Skoghall, so the shutdown in Skoghall was longer than usual.
What happened was that the startup after these annual shutdowns was more cumbersome than we had thought. We had some issues in Maxau, we had also startup issues in Skoghall after the rebuild, which made the performance worse from a kind of cost perspective and also from volume perspective. That's why the initial EUR 125 million of cost for the quarter was in fact EUR 180 million. As I showed you in the slide, if you look at Q3 and Q4 combined for last year and 2021, the total maintenance cost is the same. It's an effect between quarters, and usually we have Skoghall and Imatra in two different quarters. This year it happened to be in the same.
On the effect, quarter-on-quarter, it's in the region of EUR 40 million more maintenance costs in Q4, and year-on-year roughly EUR 30 million, 30. That gives you some flavor. When it comes to Q1 this year, actually no board mills are down for maintenance. Anjala mill, which is now part of the, of the Packaging Solutions
Packaging material
... Packaging Materials division is having maintenance stuff, but that's not really affecting the board business.
Veitsiluoto mill.
Yeah
... is in Biomaterials.
In Biomaterials, yeah. In Packaging Materials, no sort of original Packaging Materials mills are down.
Yeah.
Just following up on this, you've called out that you've been renegotiating some of your liquid packaging board contracts, which should help with the kind of price cost spread. Anything that you can give on, you know, what this means for kind of incremental profitability on that liquid packaging board? Is this, you know, you're gonna need further step-ups in pricing to kind of reset the profitability levels, or how should we think about the margins? Linked to the liquid packaging board, you know, the Beihai mill, you've over the years qualified that mill on liquid packaging. I imagine that when you dispose that mill will still be able to sell liquid packaging as per normal. There's no kind of tied to the Stora Enso.
It, I mean, it would go with the mill right when you dispose it. Whoever acquires it would get that benefit of having a qualified liquid packaging board mill.
If I answer the first question on pricing, we constantly of course monitor how we work with pricing, and as I said, liquid aseptic packaging is a stable part of consumer board, where we have a constant and ongoing discussions with customers and how we set up the contracts. I can't give you. I know you want to know how we're doing it, but I can't go into more details and answer that, as you can probably understand. Regarding Beihai, yes, the site is qualified for producing liquid packaging. Of course, it's for a customer who they choose to collaborate with, is a choice not only based on the product and quality, it's also based on innovation capabilities and other value-added services. Ultimately it's a choice of the customers who they want to collaborate with.
Yes, the site is qualified for liquid.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Robin Santavirta from Carnegie. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you very much. Hello, everybody. My first question is related to China. You alluded to the opening of that country after several years of quite stringent COVID-19 measures there. What are you seeing at the moment in China and what do you hear from your customers about the outlook for this year in China?
Well, I think the expectation is at least that some of the consumption that has been stifled during the last three years of COVID-19 closures would come back, and that the market would grow. Of course, long term, the market of China is probably not going to grow as fast as historically. That is also have to do with other factors such as demographics and so on. Specifically then if we look at kind of our products and the packaging is a good prospect in China with a growing population and urbanization. Pulp used for different end uses is still going to be the global demand for pulp is going to be driven by the Chinese growth. We don't have a lot of business in Wood Products.
That's not one of the key end use markets in Asia. There we focus more in Japan, Australia, Southeast Asia, where we have a more prestige, type of wooden construction for us. Then if we look at kind of the other grades that we have, in paper and so on, Asia is not or China is not a big market for us where we focus. That is what we see.
I understand. Thank you. second question-.
Do you want me to open up more on kind of the different grades, for instance, in packaging, in China, close, short term or long term?
Yeah, perhaps what I was sort of, what I aimed at to get sort of a feel for the general demand there when it comes to perhaps pulp and paper boards, because those are-
Mm-hmm
-the market that you should probably know the best. Just sort of thinking.
Mm-hmm
... you can see a pickup in sort of activity levels there, or more positive customers or essentially not.
I can just share in the packaging side, one of the grades of course, which is that we are delivering. Liquid is, as I said, it's a stable grade, that is a little bit different. If you look at folding boxboard, for instance, in Q4, the demand for folding boxboard was down 5%, we expect the demand in Q1 to pick up and be around 3%-4%. This is kind of one testimony that the packaging is kind of picking up in China. If we look at softwood and hardwood pulp, in demand in Q4, we had about a 3% increase in demand for softwood and hardwood.
We expect a demand between the same levels also for Q1, in pulp side.
All right. Thank you. I understand. Thank you for that detail. Now, I know you don't like to comment about pricing, but I guess sort of up or down is something that you can sort of share with us to get some kind of view where we're going in this sort of volatile market. Consumer board prices up or down going into 2023?
Well, we don't comment on pricing like that.
Not more than we already said that we have been successfully implementing price increases when it comes to renewing the contracts that we have renewed now around the new year, as typically is done.
I understand. That is fair. The final question I have, you said, Annica, a stronger position going into perhaps more challenging times. What do you mean with that? Is that sort of related to the divestment of the Paper business, or is it the cost base or could you just sort of explain so we understand-
Yeah.
How do you look at this sort of?
Yeah
-potential downturn ahead?
First of all, I think, three years ago and so on, we had a much higher net debt position. Now, even though we are doing these investments in growth, we have a very strong balance sheet. I think a balance sheet and strong liquidity is some of the key positions to have if you enter a market that's more difficult. We will continue to work with reducing our debt position and have a strong liquidity. That is one parameter. Of course, we did restructures and closed down the most unprofitable sites like Kvarnsveden and Veitsiluoto. They were also the sites that consumed a lot of electricity and energy, so they would have been in a quite difficult position...
Wood, of course. They would have been in a much, much more difficult position if we would have still had them. Of course, divesting the paper assets to other owners, we make sure that we find good homes for them with other players out there that will continue to run the business. We also take away risk of a quality and a segment that has historically been very volatile, having quite difficult and poor performance in difficult times. If we look at kind of strengthening the position in our growth segments, our Skoghall, Imatra, we have made continuous investments in Oulu now, in our renewable packaging. We make sure that the profitability and cost position of the sites that we have is leading cost positions.
Of course, in downturns and so on, you benefit from that. In Wood Products, we have also made sure to cut down costs where necessary, but also invest on sites with CLT factories that can kind of handle the volatility in Wood Products. Last but not least, cost position. If you remember, we did a cost or a profit protection program of EUR 400-something million or EUR 120 million that we started 2019 with, we followed through on that the coming year and implemented on that. Our general cost structure is much more competitive and in shape. This is of course something that we always adapt. When circumstances change, we need to make more decisions and look at what more possibilities we have.
All right. Thank you very much.
I believe...
The next question comes from Linus Larsson from SEB. Please go ahead.
Hello. Thank you very much. First question is on variable costs. Annica, you said that they remain high. Should we understand that as Q1 variable costs going up compared to the fourth quarter? If you, in that context, also could break down for us the various variable costs, how wood is progressing, how energy is progressing, how chemicals costs are progressing, logistics, et cetera, Q1 on Q4, please.
Yeah. Obviously, energy cost is one of the key drivers here, like I said earlier, key also for the full year inflation. In short term, obvious, I think it's more around energy and chemicals. On the wood side, it's a sort of mixed picture. Log prices are more stabilizing, but on the pulp side, the challenges are there because of course, steady demand for pulp, but also increasing need and use of the energy wood as such. I think for the full year outlook, the key thing is that how energy costs develop. As you have seen, it's very volatile out there. That's why it's very difficult to give very strict or sort of clear comment on the full year.
I think it's very uncertain market in general.
Are you seeing higher variable costs as a whole for the first compared to the fourth quarter?
Yes.
Yes, for the first quarter.
Yes. Absolutely.
Great. Thanks.
Visibility is, of course, more challenging and, yeah. Well, as we all know also, as market cools down, also of course, this will have an impact on other variable costs, such as logistics or chemical costs and so on. So far, we have not seen that coming through.
Right. That's very helpful. Thank you. With chemicals, I mean, that's been a cost driver now for a few quarters in the industry. Is that peaking out? Is it starting to come down, or where are we in the chemicals cost cycle?
It depends a bit on what chemical it is, but in general, I would say that that is very much linked also to energy prices. As in many cases, they use natural gas as one of the input materials for their recipes, and that is driving the chemical cost development as such. In some cases, it's easing, but in some cases, going up, so it is a bit mixed picture out there.
Mm-hmm. Logistics?
Logistics are getting better now. The constraints are easing compared to how they were earlier last year or have been actually the last couple of years. That looks somewhat easier. Obviously, fuel costs are affected by energy costs, how oil develops or diesel prices develop. They're actually going up currently as you're on the market.
That's very helpful. Thanks for clarifying. Then just jumping back to the discussion on Beihai. Beihai has been a growth generator, not least for liquid packaging board, which is part of the product mix on that paper board machine. How do you see your liquid packaging board market strategy going forward? Are you able to transfer some volumes within your system to mills that you intend to keep, or should we expect very limited growth for you in liquid board on your existing or your remaining platform in the couple of years ahead?
Very good question. As you know, Oulu second step now is focusing on consumer board grades, which are primarily within food and beverage and liquid. This, of course, is an investment that we're doing in combination with the other consumer board sites. We will have the possibility to do products and transfer mixes between the sites of Imatra, Skoghall, Fors, and Oulu, and optimize the system. All of these sites are leading cost positioned sites with good availability of fiber and very good energy solutions, forts, and so on. We see that we have the opportunity with the Oulu investment to optimize the consumer board sector and continue to drive growth.
Great. Many thanks for that. Then just finally on the integration of De Jong, what kind of a contribution should we expect in the first quarter? If you could say something about the De Jong's performance on the full year 2022, or even better, the fourth quarter, and also how that will come into your P&L. What's the split between divisions?
Yeah. Thanks. With De Jong, you have to remember, we just took it over early January, so we are at early stages of integration. That is going well as planned, and integration streams are there in place. In that sense, in full speed going ahead there. I think we have run out of time now. We're actually a bit of overtime compared to schedule. Thank you for the good questions. I know there might be more questions that are unanswered still, don't hesitate to contact our IR and Anna-Lena there to get some more help and answers. Thank you all.
Thank you.