Biomass Incinerator Looms on Horizon for Gypsum, Colorado

An 11.5 megawatt bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tor pro­pos­al for the 6,400 per­son cen­tral-Col­orado town of Gyp­sum is mov­ing along swift­ly, despite con­cerns of com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers and at least one town councilor.

Utah-based Eagle Val­ley Clean Ener­gy LLC’s facil­i­ty would burn 70,000 bone-dry tons per year of wood chips from whole trees—living and beetle-killed—tree branch­es and limbs, and “urban wood waste from a local land­fill,” requir­ing 1,200 acres of for­est per year sourced with­in a fifty to sev­en­ty-five mile radius. Gyp­sum is sur­round­ed by the White Riv­er Nation­al For­est [pic­tured below]. 

The bio­mass facil­i­ty is sched­uled to go online by the end of 2013 and would sell ten megawatts to Holy Cross Ener­gy, which pro­vides pow­er for the ski resort towns of Vail, Aspen and Glen­wood Springs. 

One Gyp­sum resident—who would only speak under con­di­tion of anonymity—said his pri­ma­ry wor­ries are “the imme­di­ate threats to the health of our school chil­dren, in addi­tion to the future growth and devel­op­ment of our town.” Refer­ring to “sub­stan­tial sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence demon­strat­ing the harm­ful pul­monary effects” of air pol­lu­tion from bio­mass facil­i­ties, the res­i­dent is par­tic­u­lar­ly averse to the sit­ing of the incin­er­a­tor “with­in a few hun­dred yards of three local schools, two play­grounds, the rec[reation] cen­ter and rec[reation] fields.” 

Natalia Swal­nick, Direc­tor of Envi­ron­men­tal Health for the Amer­i­can Lung Asso­ci­a­tion in Col­orado wrote in a June 29, 2012 let­ter that “the mod­el­ing paper­work sub­mit­ted to the [Col­orado] Depart­ment of Pub­lic Health and Envi­ron­ment indi­cates that this plant not only will be adding par­tic­u­late pol­lu­tion, but it will be reach­ing and exceed­ing the lev­el many nation­al health groups con­sid­er unsafe.”

Gyp­sum Town Coun­cilor Tom Edwards believes sit­ing the bio­mass plant on the Eagle Riv­er at the entrance to town goes against the town’s 2008 Eagle Riv­er Area Plan, an $85,000 doc­u­ment seek­ing to guide devel­op­ment along the riv­er. Accord­ing to Edwards, the plan had instead rec­om­mend­ed that the area that is now the pro­posed incin­er­a­tor site be zoned for res­i­den­tial and com­mer­cial, rather than indus­tri­al devel­op­ment. In March, Edwards was the sole dis­sent­ing vote against the Town of Gyp­sum annex­ing the pro­posed site from Eagle Coun­ty, which passed 6–1.

“My feel­ing is, to some extent, we threw out the mas­ter plan to approve this,” said Edwards via an August 22 phone interview.

Edwards’ main con­cern is the “image of the town, how many peo­ple come and live here,” and more specif­i­cal­ly, whether Gyp­sum becomes known as “an indus­tri­al town.” Edwards, who was recent­ly re-elect­ed to his seat after his vote and pub­lic stance against the annex­a­tion, says he’s since had “at least a dozen peo­ple come to me and thank me for my stance.”

When ques­tioned, Edwards admit­ted to some con­cerns with pub­lic health from the facil­i­ty, but added that they were “a minor thing.” While he’d yet to delve into the sci­ence around green­house gas emis­sions from bio­mass pow­er plants, he did ques­tion “using a huge amount of fuel to har­vest, chip and haul lum­ber to the plant.” Refer­ring to the twelve full-time jobs being offered to Gyp­sum res­i­dents by the pow­er plant—out of a total of forty-two—he said he was “not will­ing to turn the town around for twelve people.”

Edwards claims that not all of the oth­er coun­cilors are pleased with the bio­mass facil­i­ty either. He believes that they feel con­struc­tion is inevitable and that the best way to have a say in the process was to have annexed the site from the coun­ty. Oth­er issues of note to the coun­cil include the incinerator’s water use, the dis­pos­al of the waste­water in either the Eagle Riv­er or the town sewage plant, truck traf­fic, and the spread of debris.

Dean Ros­trom, spokesper­son for Eagle Val­ley Clean Ener­gy says that “the plant will be a long-term, unique and reli­able out­let for haz­ardous fuel reduc­tion with strong sup­port from fed­er­al, state and pri­vate for­est man­agers.”  Buck Sanchez, deputy for­est super­vi­sor for the White Riv­er Nation­al For­est, said the pub­licly-owned for­est would par­tial­ly fuel the facil­i­ty through log­ging for wild­fire fuels reduction. 

U.S. For­est Ser­vice sci­en­tists insist the sin­gle most effec­tive action peo­ple can take to pro­tect homes and lives from wild­fire is not back­coun­try log­ging, but tak­ing “fire­wise” pre­cau­tions imme­di­ate­ly around homes. Jack Cohen, research sci­en­tist at the Fire Sci­ences Lab­o­ra­to­ry in the For­est Ser­vice’s Rocky Moun­tain Research Sta­tion states that “home ignitabil­i­ty, rather than wild­land fuels, is the prin­ci­pal cause of home loss­es dur­ing wildland/urban inter­face fires. Key items are flam­ma­ble roof­ing mate­ri­als and the pres­ence of burn­able veg­e­ta­tion imme­di­ate­ly adja­cent to homes. Intense flame fronts (or crown fires) will not ignite wood­en walls at dis­tances greater than 40 meters or 130 feet.”

Fol­low­ing a request from com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers, a web­site on some of the con­cerns with Gypsum’s bio­mass facil­i­ty has been set up by Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work, a nation­al orga­ni­za­tion based in Wash­ing­ton, D.C. assist­ing grass­roots com­mu­ni­ties con­cerned about dirty ener­gy facilities. 


Posted

in

by


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Our Network

Watch Us on YouTube