Burning Wood is Not the Solution to Climate Change

Burn­ing Wood is Not the Solu­tion to Cli­mate Change

- by Sophie Bastable, Biofuelwatch

Under the guise of ‘green ener­gy’, burn­ing wood in pow­er sta­tions has become a mas­sive growth indus­try in the UK, with by far the biggest demand com­ing from coal-fired pow­er sta­tion oper­a­tors. So far, five of them have announced plans to con­vert, either part­ly or com­plete­ly, to biomass. 

These are Tilbury in Essex, Iron­bridge in Shrop­shire, Egg­bor­ough and Drax in York­shire, and Lynemouth in Northum­ber­land. Between them these pow­er sta­tions will require almost six times as much wood as the UK pro­duces in total every year. That sta­tis­tic alone shows just how unsus­tain­able wood-fired pow­er sta­tions are and it spells dis­as­ter for the world’s nat­ur­al habi­tats, human rights, and our hopes of com­bat­ing cli­mate change.

A demand for bio­mass on the scale planned has dire impli­ca­tions. So far, most wood pel­lets import­ed to the UK come from Cana­da and the South­ern US, while some are sourced from the Baltic States, Rus­sia and Por­tu­gal. In Cana­da and the South­ern US, high­ly bio­di­verse forests are already being clear-cut to pro­duce pel­lets. And across Rus­sia, the Baltic States, the Mediter­ranean and Scan­di­navia, bio­di­verse forests are being destroyed and then turned into mono­cul­ture tree plan­ta­tions for bio­mass. This trend is like­ly to wors­en as demand for bio­mass grows in the UK. In the longer term, ener­gy com­pa­nies are look­ing at imports from Brazil, West and Cen­tral Africa and oth­er regions of the Glob­al South, where trees grow faster and land is cheaper.

At the moment there are few legal restric­tions on where bio­mass can come from, and as the rush for bio­fu­els has already shown, com­pa­nies usu­al­ly go for the cheap­est grow­ing land they can find. This means a high risk of land-grab­bing from some of the world’s poor­est peo­ple, and ris­ing food prices as land is divert­ed away from grow­ing food.

Although burn­ing bio­mass releas­es less of the chem­i­cal sul­phur diox­ide than burn­ing coal does, it releas­es more fine par­tic­u­lates and volatile organ­ic com­pounds. These pose a par­tic­u­lar­ly seri­ous risk of lung and heart dis­ease to com­mu­ni­ties liv­ing in close prox­im­i­ty to pow­er sta­tions. More wor­ry­ing, how­ev­er, is the fact that pow­er sta­tions burn­ing wood emit up to 50% more car­bon diox­ide than those burn­ing coal. Com­pa­nies and pol­i­cy­mak­ers ignore this car­bon, claim­ing that bio­mass is green because new trees grow back in the place of those that have been cut down, there­by seques­ter­ing the car­bon that was emit­ted in their com­bus­tion, mak­ing the process car­bon neu­tral. Yet it takes decades before a tree matures suf­fi­cient­ly for that to hap­pen. And when forests are destroyed and turned into mono­cul­ture plan­ta­tions, much of the car­bon will sim­ply stay in the atmos­phere. Such a car­bon spike is a dis­as­ter at a time when sci­en­tists have shown that human-cre­at­ed emis­sions and lev­els of atmos­pher­ic CO2 must be reduced rapid­ly if we are to have any hope of avoid­ing the worst impacts of cli­mate change.

So how do we keep warm in the future? First, we need to address ener­gy con­ser­va­tion and a reduc­tion in ener­gy con­sump­tion. These issues can be resolved in myr­i­ad ways and be net job cre­ators, but we need to invest in gen­uine renew­able ener­gy sys­tems, which should be small-scale and community-owned.


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