Electronic Map Tracks Logging for Biomass Energy

Elec­tron­ic Map Tracks Log­ging for Bio­mass Energy

The first and only elec­tron­ic map track­ing log­ging sites sourc­ing wood to a bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ty has been released by Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work, a Wash­ing­ton, DC-based non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tion with field offices in Ver­mont, Penn­syl­va­nia and Ore­gon and Bio­fu­el­watch, an inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tion based in Ver­mont and the UK.

McNeil Bio­mass Incinerator

The ini­tial phase of the McNeil Bio­mass For­est Map­ping Project—fund­ed by a grant from the Fund for Wild Nature—maps log­ging sites in Ver­mont that pro­vid­ed wood to the McNeil Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion in 2010, a 50-megawatt bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tor in Burling­ton. The map over­lays near­ly 150 for­est sites logged in 2010—along with sev­er­al pho­to galleries—on a satel­lite map of Ver­mont using Google Maps. 

Each log­ging site is marked with an icon of a stump with fur­ther zoom­ing in reveal­ing a trans­par­ent blue poly­gon out­lin­ing the exact loca­tion of the cut­ting. Click­ing on the stump brings up rel­e­vant data includ­ing acreage, town, prop­er­ty own­er, log­ger, forester, date logged, and doc­u­men­ta­tion of the asso­ci­at­ed scans tak­en from Ver­mont Fish and Wildlife Depart­ment maps.

The McNeil project is inte­grat­ed into Ener­gy Jus­tice Network’s Dirty Ener­gy Map­ping Project  which pin­points the loca­tions of exist­ing and pro­posed bio­mass and waste incin­er­a­tors, nuclear reac­tors, nat­ur­al gas and coal-fired pow­er plants in the US and doc­u­ments grass­roots com­mu­ni­ty resis­tance to those facilities. 

Once com­plet­ed, the McNeil Bio­mass For­est Map­ping Project will map log­ging for both the McNeil sta­tion and the 25-megawatt Rye­gate Bio­mass Incin­er­a­tor (in Rye­gate, Ver­mont) over a ten year peri­od from 2002–2012 to depict the actu­al for­est foot­print of indus­tri­al scale bio­mass ener­gy. The fin­ished project will include dozens of pho­to gal­leries show­ing on-the-ground impacts of bio­mass ener­gy log­ging projects.

The maps of the log­ging operations—scanned from hard copies and repli­cat­ed by hand using Google Maps—were accessed through the Ver­mont Depart­ment of Fish and Wildlife which has been tasked by the Ver­mont State Leg­is­la­ture to pre-approve man­age­ment plans to log forests pro­vid­ing wood to the McNeil and Rye­gate bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tors. Final bio­mass log­ging projects are approved by foresters employed by the McNeil facil­i­ty and its co-own­er Burling­ton Elec­tric Depart­ment, with Fish and Wildlife offi­cials rarely mak­ing site vis­its in advance of the log­ging and nev­er after log­ging has tak­en place.

An esti­mat­ed one-half to two-thirds of the wood fuel­ing the McNeil incin­er­a­tor is sourced from New York State, where log­ging sites are nei­ther tracked nor made avail­able to the pub­lic, accord­ing to the New York State Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal Con­ser­va­tion. Ver­mont is the only state in the US requir­ing that a state agency keep track of forests logged for some bio­mass ener­gy facilities.

The McNeil bio­mass incin­er­a­tor burns an esti­mat­ed 400,000 green tons of wood per year—seventy-six tons, or thir­ty cords, of whole-tree chips per hour—along with a small per­cent­age of nat­ur­al gas, accord­ing to Burling­ton Elec­tric Depart­ment. The wood fuel­ing the McNeil incin­er­a­tor con­sists of 70% trees and woody mate­ri­als cut direct­ly from the for­est, 25% from “residues” (wood chips and bark from local sawmills), and 5% from recy­cled wood. Along with tree tops and limbs (which con­tain the high­est lev­el of nutri­ent con­tent of any part of the tree), the McNeil facil­i­ty burns whole trees, as has been doc­u­ment­ed in pho­tographs [see below].

McNeil sources its wood from “inte­grat­ed har­vest” log­ging oper­a­tions, which typ­i­cal­ly involves “whole-tree” log­ging and includes clearcuts up to twen­ty-five acres, hous­ing devel­op­ments, and for­est “thin­ning.” Whole-tree log­ging is more inten­sive than tra­di­tion­al log­ging since it removes the nutri­ent rich tree tops and branch­es from the for­est which could oth­er­wise pro­vide habi­tat, pre­vent ero­sion, and enrich for­est soils. Along with wood for the incin­er­a­tor, these “inte­grat­ed har­vests” also pro­vide lum­ber, paper pulp, and fire­wood. Some trees that could be used for fur­ni­ture, paper pulp, par­ti­cle board, fire­wood, mulch, com­post (and occa­sion­al­ly lum­ber) are instead burned for elec­tric­i­ty at less than 25% efficiency—effectively wast­ing three out of four trees.

“For the first time we’re show­ing the direct impact on forests from bio­mass incin­er­a­tion,” said Aaron Krei­der, web devel­op­er for Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work and lead design­er of the map­ping project. “Can you imag­ine what the impact of McNeil will be dur­ing its entire life­time? Can you imag­ine what could hap­pen to our forests if we con­vert dozens of large coal plants to biomass?” 

At twen­ty-six years old, Burlington’s McNeil Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion is one of the nation’s longest oper­at­ing bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tors. The incin­er­a­tor is sit­ed adja­cent to the low-income, eth­ni­cal­ly-diverse Old North End neigh­bor­hood, 200 yards from the near­est res­i­dence. McNeil is Vermont’s largest pol­luter, accord­ing to Plan­et Hazard.com.  

In a recent con­tro­ver­sy, the City of Burling­ton, Vermont’s Draft Cli­mate Action Plan report­ed only a frac­tion of the car­bon diox­ide (CO2) smoke­stack emis­sions from McNeil—hindering the city’s efforts to accu­rate­ly mea­sure and reduce its car­bon foot­print, accord­ing to crit­ics. The 50-megawatt facil­i­ty is joint­ly owned by Burling­ton Elec­tric Com­pa­ny, Green Moun­tain Pow­er, and Ver­mont Pub­lic Pow­er Sup­ply Author­i­ty.

Over 200 elec­tric­i­ty-gen­er­at­ing, wood-burn­ing bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tors cur­rent­ly oper­ate in the US, with anoth­er 200 pro­posed, accord­ing to Forisk Con­sult­ing. Though more and more of these facil­i­ties are being built across the nation—due, in large part, to gen­er­ous fed­er­al and state “renew­able” ener­gy sub­si­dies and incentives—the eco­log­i­cal foot­print of exist­ing indus­tri­al-scale bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties has yet to be ade­quate­ly assessed.

“Even as for­est pro­tec­tion is increas­ing­ly rec­og­nized as one of the best defens­es against cli­mate change—while also crit­i­cal to pro­tect­ing water, soils and biodiversity—governments are putting into place poli­cies and sub­si­dies to cut and burn forests the world over for ‘bio­mass’ elec­tric­i­ty and heat,” said Rachel Smolk­er of Bio­fu­el­watch, an inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tion based in the US and UK. “They false­ly refer to this as ‘clean, green and renew­able,’ but it is a total dis­as­ter in the making.”

The McNeil Bio­mass For­est Map­ping Pro­ject would make the log­ging oper­a­tions for the McNeil and Rye­gate bio­mass incin­er­a­tors trans­par­ent and acces­si­ble to indus­try, gov­ern­ment, media, sci­en­tists and mem­bers of the pub­lic, allow­ing for the doc­u­men­ta­tion of actu­al, on-the-ground impacts asso­ci­at­ed with for­est bio­mass ener­gy. The ulti­mate goal of the project is to pro­vide a mod­el for a com­pre­hen­sive, nation­al assess­ment of the total for­est foot­print of indus­tri­al-scale bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties to gauge cur­rent and future eco­log­i­cal impacts.


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