International Paper Axes Aurora Plant As Elk Grove And Barrington Take The Hit

International Paper is pulling the plug on several North American operations, with its Aurora, Illinois sheet plant set to close and converting work in Elk Grove, California, and Barrington, New Jersey scheduled to wind down. Preprint work at a site in Richwood, Kentucky, is also slated to end. The company says the changes, expected to be wrapped up by the end of the third quarter of 2026, are part of a larger effort to streamline its North America packaging footprint, cut costs, and funnel more cash into higher-value facilities. For workers, suppliers, and customers in those communities, the announcement mostly raises one immediate question: what happens next and when.

What the company said

In a press release distributed through PR Newswire, International Paper outlined a plan that touches four locations at once. The company said it will close a sheet plant in Aurora, Illinois, shut converting operations in Elk Grove, California, and Barrington, New Jersey, and end preprint work in Richwood, Kentucky, with all of those changes targeted for completion by the end of the third quarter of 2026.

“These are difficult but necessary decisions,” said Tom Hamic, who leads the packaging business, in the release. International Paper said affected employees will be offered outplacement support, severance, and benefits, while customers are slated to be shifted to other facilities in the company’s regional network.

Which plants, and what we don’t know

Market watchers quickly echoed the corporate announcement, but also pointed out the gaps. As TradingView noted, International Paper named specific locations and the broad timeline, yet skipped over some key numbers, including how many jobs are on the line and what the restructuring might cost.

Without those details, local officials, unions and employees are left to read between the lines and press for formal WARN notices and clearer transition schedules. For now, communities in Aurora, Elk Grove, Barrington and Richwood are working with a headline but not much fine print.

Why IP is reshuffling now

The move fits into a multi-year push by International Paper to crank up efficiency and lean into higher-value corrugated production. The company has been shifting capital toward new box plants, including a greenfield facility in Rankin County, Mississippi that was highlighted by Packaging Dive. Older or less strategic sites are increasingly on the chopping block as part of that tradeoff…

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