A neutral look at what effective audits do, how they work, and where value is typically found. The perspective below reflects what a specialist typically looks for when diagnosing variability and constraints across the full pulp-and-paper process.
In pulp and paper manufacturing, performance is often limited less by a single “big problem” and more by the compounding effect and the combination of several process parameters in everyday variability: the over-all processes concepts, raw material swings, process equipment sizes and design, lay-out engineering, operating parameters ‘set, DCS control program. The most reliable improvements usually come when the mill team and the auditor work as one—combining operational context with independent process expertise to isolate mechanisms, agree priorities, and implement changes that hold.
When variability becomes the norm, it can be difficult for mill teams to distinguish symptoms from root causes—especially because cause-and-effect often stretches across multiple areas of the process.
A process audit is most valuable when a mill faces questions that normal troubleshooting cannot settle—because many parameters move at once, and local optimization in one area may create constraints in another. A well-run audit introduces a disciplined “outside-in” perspective: it tests assumptions, challenges practices that have quietly become “normal,” and refreshes understanding of state-of-the-art concepts and operating windows. The goal is not to criticize decisions made under constraints; it is to make constraints visible and actionable.
At its best, a process audit is a structured, evidence-based assessment of current performance and the mechanisms behind it. It links the full chain—from raw materials, process design and equipment in operation—to the mill’s target outcomes (runnability, quality, efficiency, cost). The output should be a prioritized set of actions: what to change first, why it matters, what to measure, and what conditions must be in place for improvements to hold.
Many audits fail for a simple reason: they rush to conclusions without building a reliable baseline. A phased approach helps avoid that trap, ensuring that on-site time is used efficiently and that the analysis is grounded in the right signals.
While each mill and grade has unique constraints, audit outcomes often cluster around a few value levers. The common theme is reducing variability at the source and widening the stable operating window. Because mills often need results quickly, the resulting action plan is typically sequenced to deliver early, measurable gains (“quick wins”) while building toward sustained performance improvements.
The most useful audits do not aim for perfect models; they aim for better decisions. By making variability visible, connecting mechanisms across the full line, and translating findings into controlled trials and practical changes, a process audit can help mills improve performance in a way that is measurable—and sustainable.
Note: This perspective reflects common audit practices used across the pulp and paper industry, including methods applied by specialist process partners such as AFT.

Régis Masson, Applications Manager, Screening & Process Solutions
With more than 30 years in the pulp and paper industry, I have supported mills worldwide through process audits, optimization programs, and hands-on troubleshooting. My work has included collaborations with leading suppliers and companies and extensive on-site time spent side by side with customer teams as an impartial advisor. I focus on practical, evidence-based process design — translating observations and data into changes that improve stability, efficiency, and measurable performance. Process engineering is a personal passion, and I’m energized by collaborative work that helps customers realize clear value from the audit process—a focus I have brought to my work at AFT since joining the company at the end of 2021.