James K Irving, Canadian forestry billionaire, dies at 96

James K Irving, Canadian forestry billionaire, dies at 96

James's death comes just a month after his younger brother, billionaire oilman Arthur L Irving, died at the age of 93.

James K Irving is survived by four children, Jim, Robert, Mary-Jean, and Judith, 14 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren. (JD Irving, Limited/Facebook pic)
SAINT JOHN:
James K Irving, the Canadian billionaire who expanded his family’s forest products business into a conglomerate and founded a record tree-planting programme, has died. He was 96.

Irving died in Saint John, New Brunswick, his family announced on Friday. He is survived by four children, Jim, Robert, Mary-Jean, and Judith, 14 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren.

His younger brother, billionaire oilman Arthur L Irving, died just last month at the age of 93. The youngest of the three siblings, John Irving, died in 2010.

Irving’s estimated net worth was US$7.2 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. He was the chairman of JD Irving Ltd, the closely held conglomerate started in 1882 by his grandfather James Dergavel Irving. Today, it employs some 19,000 people across forestry, energy, transportation, frozen food, and shipbuilding in Atlantic Canada, according to its website.

Known for the sawmills and paper plants that survived when rivals closed, Irving invested in technology and expanded into more valuable products. As newspapers and newsprint started to decline, Irving shifted the business to bathroom tissues and diapers. The company is a private-label supplier and also sells under the Royale brand in Canada and as Scotties in the US.

The Irving family is the sixth-biggest landowner in the US, with almost 1.3 million acres, according to The Land Report, a magazine on American land ownership.

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