Biomass Health Study a Smokescreen?

A study on the health risks from a bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tor pro­posed for Plac­er Coun­ty, Cal­i­for­nia con­tains “sev­er­al fal­lac­i­es,” accord­ing to Nor­ma Kreilein, MD, a Fel­low of the Amer­i­can Acad­e­my of Pedi­atrics.

A Health Impact Assess­ment of the Pro­posed Cab­in Creek Bio­mass Ener­gy Facil­i­ty in Plac­er Coun­ty, Cal­i­for­nia claims that the con­struc­tion of the 2.2 megawatt Cab­in Creek Bio­mass Ener­gy Facil­i­ty two miles from 16,000 res­i­dent Truc­k­ee will “like­ly ben­e­fit com­mu­ni­ty health in the Lake Tahoe region,” despite emit­ting high­er lev­els of par­tic­u­late mat­ter and oth­er air pol­lu­tants per unit of ener­gy than a coal-fired plant, the dirt­i­est fos­sil fuel. The near­est res­i­dence stands 1,500 feet from the facility.

On Decem­ber 27, 2012, the Cen­ter for Bio­log­i­cal Diver­si­ty appealed the Plac­er Coun­ty Plan­ning Com­mis­sion’s deci­sion to adopt the con­di­tion­al use per­mit and cer­ti­fy the Envi­ron­men­tal Impact Report for the Cab­in Creek facility.

“The study has too many holes to be a foun­da­tion for a deci­sion,” says Dr. Kreilein, a pedi­a­tri­cian who works with chil­dren and infants suf­fer­ing from lung dis­ease, based in Jasper, Indi­ana. “The direct health effects of the par­tic­u­lates on the local pop­u­la­tion are not assessed what­so­ev­er.” Dr. Kreilein, along with oth­er med­ical doc­tors and sci­en­tists trav­eled to Wash­ing­ton, DC in Sep­tem­ber 2012 for a Con­gres­sion­al brief­ing orga­nized by Save Amer­i­ca’s Forests to present on the neg­a­tive health impacts of bio­mass incin­er­a­tion, includ­ing asth­ma and cancer. 

The Health Impact Assess­ment acknowl­edges that “there will be project emis­sions which could exac­er­bate health issues in vul­ner­a­ble pop­u­la­tion groups” and that res­i­dents who live in the area over the next sev­en­ty years could “expect an addi­tion­al risk of 2.0 excess can­cers per mil­lion peo­ple.” The study notes that bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties emit “cri­te­ria air pol­lu­tants and air tox­i­cs,” such as asth­ma-caus­ing par­tic­u­late mat­ter and nitro­gen oxides and “55 tox­ic air pol­lu­tants includ­ing ben­zene, formalde­hyde, acrolein, and nickel.”

Accord­ing to the Cab­in Creek Bio­mass Facil­i­ty Project Draft Envi­ron­men­tal Impact Report, the facil­i­ty would emit up to 77.5 lbs per day of volatile organ­ic com­pounds (VOCs), 77.7 lbs per day of nitro­gen oxides (NOx), 29.5 lbs per day of par­tic­u­late mat­ter (PM)10 and 17.5 lbs per day of PM2.5 from its smoke­stack, from wood chip­ping, and from trans­porta­tion. Smoke­stack emis­sions alone would account for 15.4 lbs per day of VOCs, 72 lbs per day of NOx, 14.4 lbs per day of PM10, and 14.4 lbs per day of PM2.5.

“Elder­ly, chil­dren, and peo­ple who suf­fer from asth­ma or oth­er res­pi­ra­to­ry ill­ness­es and heart dis­ease are par­tic­u­lar­ly sus­cep­ti­ble to changes in air qual­i­ty,” accord­ing to the Health Impact Assess­ment. The study reveals that “there are no long term stud­ies that have exam­ined the health impacts” of bio­mass facilities.

“I have nev­er heard where fine par­tic­u­lates are good for any­thing but can­cer,” said Kings Beach, Cal­i­for­nia res­i­dent Danielle Han­k­in­son. Kings Beach had pre­vi­ous­ly been pro­posed as a pos­si­ble site for the bio­mass facil­i­ty until local res­i­dents voiced opposition.

In 2004, Plac­er Coun­ty Air Pol­lu­tion Con­trol “amend­ed Rule 225 to reduce par­tic­u­late mat­ter pro­duc­tion from wood burn­ing appli­ances” due to air pol­lu­tion con­cerns. Truc­k­ee “res­i­dents and offi­cials” have spo­ken of the “need to improve air qual­i­ty, par­tic­u­lar­ly dur­ing the win­ter months when wood burn­ing stoves are in high­er use.”

The study rec­om­mends cre­at­ing a “com­mu­ni­ca­tions plan” to “ease com­mu­ni­ty anx­i­eties regard­ing the facil­i­ty,” espe­cial­ly dur­ing the win­ter when an inver­sion lay­er makes air pol­lu­tion more notice­able. Oth­er impacts include the inhala­tion of wood dust escap­ing from the facil­i­ty or trucks bring­ing in wood, as well as “noise dis­tur­bance” and odor.

“Truck­ing bio­mass for incin­er­a­tion does not make sense, even out­side of the health issue,” said Cari­na Cut­ler of King’s Beach.

The Health Impact Assess­ment claims that cut­ting 14,000–17,000 dry tons of wood per year from forests with­in thir­ty miles of the facil­i­ty, includ­ing from the Tahoe and El Dora­do Nation­al Forests, will “improve” region­al air qual­i­ty. The study argues that emis­sions from wood burn­ing will be decreased because the wood fuel­ing the facil­i­ty would oth­er­wise be burned in open slash piles in the for­est fol­low­ing log­ging oper­a­tions, includ­ing clearcuts. The tops and branch­es of trees con­tain their high­est nutri­ent con­tent and remov­ing them from the for­est to burn as bio­mass ener­gy pre­vents these nutri­ents from return­ing to the soil.

 The Health Impact Assess­ment also advo­cates for an increase in wild­fire “fuels reduc­tion” log­ging, which includes log­ging whole trees, some­times from old growth forests. For­est advo­cates claim that “fuels reduc­tion” is sim­ply anoth­er name for com­mer­cial log­ging and inef­fec­tive at pro­tect­ing homes or even reduc­ing wildfire—which is a nat­ur­al and essen­tial com­po­nent of west­ern for­est ecosystems.

“The lat­est research is sug­gest­ing that weather/climatic con­di­tions, rather than fuels, dri­ve large blazes,” wrote ecol­o­gist George Wuerth­n­er in Fire Myths/Fire Real­i­ties. “Thin­ning pro­grams are unlike­ly to work effec­tive­ly in drought years. And since near­ly all big blazes occur in drought years, these are the only fires that are worth wor­ry­ing about.” 

Log­ging forests can expose them to sun­light, dry­ing them and mak­ing them more flam­ma­ble. Log­ging can also open forests to wind, which can spread flames faster dur­ing wildfire.

Jack Cohen, research sci­en­tist at the Fire Sci­ences Lab­o­ra­to­ry at 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.”

A Health Impact Assess­ment of the Pro­posed Cab­in Creek Bio­mass Ener­gy Facil­i­ty in Plac­er Coun­ty, Cal­i­for­nia was con­duct­ed by the Sequoia Foun­da­tion which, accord­ing to its mis­sion state­ment, “seeks to sup­port the efforts of local, state, national—and international—public health agen­cies in pro­mot­ing and imple­ment­ing effec­tive pub­lic health policy.” 

The Sequoia Foun­da­tion received grant sup­port for the report from the Health Impact Project which is a col­lab­o­ra­tion of the Robert Wood John­son Foun­da­tion and Pew Char­i­ta­ble Trusts  

The Robert Wood John­son Foun­da­tion was found­ed with mon­ey from the chem­i­cal com­pa­ny John­son and John­son. The Pew Char­i­ta­ble Trusts is a pri­vate foun­da­tion cre­at­ed by the chil­dren of Joseph and Mary Pew, the founder of Sun Oil (Suno­co).

In his 2004 arti­cle, How the Pew Char­i­ta­ble Trust is Smoth­er­ing the Grass­roots Envi­ron­men­tal Move­ment, Cal­i­for­nia envi­ron­men­tal advo­cate Felice Pace wrote that Pew’s exten­sive fund­ing of groups advo­cat­ing for small parcels of wilderness—as opposed to whole­sale pub­lic lands protection—did more harm than good. “In the 1970s and 1980s a vibrant, tru­ly grass­roots pub­lic land pro­tec­tion move­ment emerged–first in the West and then nation-wide. Dur­ing the 1990s Pew, with sup­port from oth­er foun­da­tions, moved deci­sive­ly to con­trol this move­ment.” The end result of the Pew fund­ing strat­e­gy, accord­ing to Pace, “may include [indus­tri­al] devel­op­ment of larg­er, more eco­log­i­cal­ly impor­tant nat­ur­al areas.” 


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