Study: Permanent Increase in Atmospheric CO2 from Biomass Energy

A new study out of Nor­way demon­strates what oppo­nents of bio­mass ener­gy have been say­ing for years: log­ging forests for bioen­er­gy leads to a per­ma­nent increase in atmos­pher­ic car­bon dioxide.

Bjart Holtsmark’s study, “The out­come is in the assump­tions: ana­lyz­ing the effects on atmos­pher­ic CO2 lev­els of increased use of bioen­er­gy from for­est bio­mass,” pub­lished in Glob­al Change Biol­o­gy in 2012, pro­vides com­pelling evi­dence that the expan­sion of indus­tri­al-scale bio­mass ener­gy will exac­er­bate cli­mate change.

Sci­en­tif­ic stud­ies focus­ing on the green­house gas emis­sions of burn­ing forests for elec­tric­i­ty and/or heat have evolved sig­nif­i­cant­ly over the past few years. Ear­li­er stud­ies assum­ing the car­bon neu­tral­i­ty of bio­mass ener­gy gave way to a more recent accep­tance of a short-term car­bon debt (decades to cen­turies) with long-term car­bon neu­tral­i­ty, lead­ing up to today’s con­clu­sion that “wood fuels are not car­bon neu­tral, nei­ther in the long term nor in the short term.”

Holtsmark’s paper eval­u­ates five pre­vi­ous stud­ies on car­bon diox­ide emis­sions from bio­mass ener­gy— Manomet Cen­ter for Con­ser­va­tion Sci­ences (2010), Cheru­bi­ni (2011), McK­ech­nie (2011) and Holts­mark (2012)—and adjusts some of their flawed method­olo­gies, deter­min­ing that “when the most real­is­tic assump­tions are used…an increased har­vest lev­el in forests leads to a per­ma­nent increase in atmos­pher­ic CO2 concentration.”

One pre­vi­ous error in method­ol­o­gy involved bas­ing cal­cu­la­tions of green­house gas emis­sions on a sin­gle log­ging event in a for­est stand, as opposed to the more real­is­tic sce­nario of mul­ti­ple log­ging events. “IPCC [Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Pan­el on Cli­mate Change] doc­u­ments, such as Chum et al. (2012), envis­age a per­ma­nent increase in the use of bioen­er­gy and, accord­ing­ly, a high­er har­vest rate,” explains Holts­mark, find­ing that “results change fun­da­men­tal­ly” when mul­ti­ple for­est entries are tak­en into account.

Holts­mark also cor­rects the assump­tion that forests are always cut at peak growth, which is rarely the case due to eco­nom­ic pres­sures to log as quick­ly and often as pos­si­ble. Fur­ther, Holts­mark high­lights the need to mea­sure car­bon diox­ide emis­sions against a base­line sce­nario of an unlogged for­est “in which the trees are still grow­ing, thus cap­tur­ing CO2 from the atmosphere.”

“Tech­ni­cal­ly speak­ing, this has nev­er been a com­pli­cat­ed issue,” said Chris Mat­era, founder of Mass­a­chu­setts For­est Watch, whose orga­ni­za­tion has been call­ing atten­tion to the health and envi­ron­men­tal impacts of bio­mass ener­gy in New Eng­land since 2007. “All that has ever been nec­es­sary to real­ize that increased cut­ting and burn­ing of forests is not ‘car­bon neu­tral’ is sec­ond grade math.” 

“Ongo­ing log­ging to fuel ongo­ing bio­mass oper­a­tions will add car­bon to the atmos­phere at the smoke stack,” Mat­era explained, “and increased removals will increase stress to forests and soils, and will like­ly reduce over­all, long term growth rates thus also adding to atmos­pher­ic car­bon lev­els – by absorb­ing less.”

“Instead, we need to do the oppo­site, let forests grow and expand as much as pos­si­ble to clean up the mess we have made of our air and atmosphere.”


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