Everything’s Bigger in Texas, Including Biomass Incinerators

Baby back ribs aren’t the only things being cooked in Texas nowa­days. With the Nacog­doches Gen­er­at­ing Facil­i­ty fir­ing up for the first time in July—at 100 megawatts, it’s one of the largest bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tors in the U.S.—Texas will also be cook­ing a heck of a lot of trees. At least one mil­lion green tons of wood per year, to be sourced from whole trees, tree tops, limbs and sawmill residues with­in a 75-mile radius of Sac­ul, Texas, accord­ing to a fact sheet from own­er and oper­a­tor South­ern Pow­er

South­ern Pow­er, a sub­sidiary of Atlanta-based South­ern Com­pa­ny, pur­chased the yet-to-be-con­struct­ed facil­i­ty from Amer­i­can Renew­ables in 2009. South­ern Com­pa­ny also owns elec­tric util­i­ties in four states, includ­ing coal, nat­ur­al gas, and nuclear pow­er plants, along with “the nation’s sec­ond largest solar pho­to­volta­ic plant,” in part­ner­ship with CNN founder Ted Turn­er, accord­ing to a com­pa­ny press release

The Nacog­doches Gen­er­at­ing Facil­i­ty cost half a bil­lion dol­lars to build, uti­lizes a bub­bling flu­idized-bed boil­er, and will report­ed­ly pro­vide forty per­ma­nent jobs, accord­ing to South­ern Com­pa­ny. In 2008, the com­pa­ny entered into a twen­ty-year Pow­er Pur­chase Agree­ment for $2.3 bil­lion with Austin Ener­gy, owned by the City of Austin. At least one Austin City Coun­cilor who vot­ed in favor of the Pow­er Pur­chase Agree­ment, Mike Mar­tinez, regrets his deci­sion, and said that if the vote came up again today, he would not vote in favor, accord­ing to the Austin Busi­ness Jour­nal. The City Coun­cil was also crit­i­cized by the solar indus­try for pri­or­i­tiz­ing bio­mass incin­er­a­tion over solar power.

With anoth­er 50 megawatt bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tor oper­at­ing in near­by Lufkin and sev­er­al oth­er Texas incin­er­a­tors on the table, where in the arid state will these facil­i­ties find all the mil­lions of tons of wood per year need­ed to keep chug­ging along over the com­ing decades? 

The Nacog­doches bio­mass incin­er­a­tor is locat­ed in the Piney Woods region, with­in a 75-mile radius (as the crow flies) of the Angeli­na, Dav­ey Crock­ett and Sabine Nation­al Forests. The bio­mass indus­try has part­nered with the U.S. For­est Ser­vice to open more Nation­al Forests to log­ging to fuel bio­mass incin­er­a­tors. “In 2011, Texas expe­ri­enced an excep­tion­al drought, pro­longed high winds, and record-set­ting tem­per­a­tures” killing up to half a bil­lion trees, accord­ing to the Texas For­est Ser­vice Sus­tain­able Forestry chief Burl Car­raway, quot­ed in a Reuters arti­cle. It remains to be seen what por­tion of the mil­lions of green tons of wood per year need­ed to feed these incin­er­a­tor will be sourced from our pub­licly-owned forests.


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