Carbon Accounting Errors Skew Burlington, Vermont’s Climate Plan

The City of Burling­ton, Vermont’s Draft Cli­mate Action Plan reports only a frac­tion of the car­bon diox­ide (CO2) smoke­stack emis­sions from the McNeil Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion [pic­tured below]—a 50 megawatt bio­mass incin­er­a­tor sup­ply­ing rough­ly one-third of the city’s electricity—hindering the city’s efforts to accu­rate­ly mea­sure and reduce its car­bon footprint. 

The U.S. Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency (EPA) cal­cu­lates McNeil’s CO2 emis­sions alone at 444,646 tons per year yet the Burling­ton Plan reports the entire City of Burlington’s emis­sions for 2007, from all sources, at 397,272.4 tons. Crit­ics con­tend that the inac­cu­rate car­bon account­ing inval­i­dates the Plan’s tar­gets for “20% reduc­tion of 2007 [CO2] lev­els by 2020” and “80% reduc­tions by 2050”—arguably the main pur­pose of the plan. 

Sev­er­al cit­i­zens, includ­ing civ­il engi­neer and founder of Mass­a­chu­setts For­est Watch, Chris Mat­era, con­tact­ed the City about the error. Jon Adams-Kol­litz, Inter­im Coor­di­na­tor for the City of Burlington’s Sus­tain­abil­i­ty Action Team, part of the Com­mu­ni­ty Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Office (CEDO), respond­ed that the City “account­ed GHG [green­house gas] emis­sions for McNeil with a coef­fi­cient of 0.032 kgCO2/kWh [kilo­grams of CO2 per kilo­watt hour].”

“Using Mr. Adams-Kol­litz’s fac­tor of 0.032 kgCO2/kWh yields only 10,868 tons of CO2” instead of the 444,646 tons cal­cu­lat­ed by the EPA, coun­tered Mat­era by email, show­ing his cal­cu­la­tions. “If the inten­tion was to ‘cred­it’ only 2% of McNeil emis­sions to Burling­ton, this would explain the difference…If so, where do the remain­ing 98% of McNeil CO2 emis­sions get counted?”

“We appre­ci­ate your per­spec­tive, and we will have to agree to dis­agree on this issue,” Kol­litz respond­ed. “Our McNeil engi­neers, and our con­sul­tants for the Cli­mate Action Plan Update, feel sol­id in the sci­ence and meth­ods uti­lized in our 2007 and 2010 inventories.”’

The McNeil Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion, which began oper­a­tions in 1984, burns approx­i­mate­ly 400,000 green tons of wood per year—30 cords every hour—of whole trees [pic­tured below], tree tops and limbs, “residues such as saw­dust, chips and bark from local sawmills,” and “urban wood waste.” The McNeil facil­i­ty sources wood from forests in New York State and Ver­mont from log­ging oper­a­tions rang­ing from sug­ar bush “thin­nings,” to 25 acre clearcuts, to clear­ing lots for hous­ing developments.

As of 1989, McNeil also burns a vary­ing per­cent­age of nat­ur­al gas, some of which can be traced to hydraulic frac­tur­ing or “frack­ing” in Cana­da. Oth­er than car­bon diox­ide, the aging incin­er­a­tor emits dozens of tox­ic pol­lu­tants, includ­ing asth­ma-caus­ing par­tic­u­late mat­ter and car­cino­genic volatile organ­ic com­pounds (VOCs), at high­er lev­els than many coal plants. McNeil is sit­ed a few hun­dred yards from the near­est res­i­dences in Burlington’s Old North End neigh­bor­hood, which has the high­est per­cent­age of eth­nic diver­si­ty in all of Ver­mont. PlanetHazard.com lists McNeil as the worst pol­luter in the state. 

William S. Kee­ton, Pro­fes­sor of For­est Ecol­o­gy and Forestry Chair at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Vermont’s Ruben­stein School con­tact­ed the City on the McNeil car­bon account­ing con­tro­ver­sy by email, explain­ing that “on one point there is a grow­ing con­sen­sus with­in the peer-reviewed sci­en­tif­ic lit­er­a­ture. Name­ly, that we can­not assume bio­mass ener­gy to be emis­sions neu­tral, but rather there are dif­fer­ences in short vs. long-term net emissions.”

“These are depen­dent on a num­ber of vari­ables, such as type, fre­quen­cy, and inten­si­ty of har­vest­ing as well as the spe­cif­ic ener­gy sub­sti­tu­tions,” Kee­ton wrote, attach­ing five stud­ies from Glob­al Change Biol­o­gy to sup­port his points. “Under­stand­ing these dif­fer­ences will require com­plex account­ing method­olo­gies and pro­jec­tions of future har­vest­ing and ener­gy use scenarios.”

Kee­ton rec­om­mends that Burling­ton “rec­og­nize that wood bioen­er­gy has both pros (e.g. local, renew­able ener­gy source) and cons (e.g. high like­li­hood of net pos­i­tive emis­sions dur­ing the near term so crit­i­cal for avoid­ing irre­versible high mag­ni­tude cli­mate change).”

350 Ver­mont, the state chap­ter of the nation­al cli­mate change advo­ca­cy group found­ed by Bill McK­ibben, also con­tact­ed the City with its con­cerns regard­ing the McNeil issue. Burling­ton res­i­dent David Stem­ber sent an email on behalf of “Team 350 Ver­mont” to Kol­litz and City of Burling­ton Com­pre­hen­sive Plan­ner San­drine Thibault, which includ­ed a blog post urg­ing the City to “fur­ther devel­op its green­house gas account­ing practices.”

“In addi­tion to (not instead of) the emis­sions esti­mates deter­mined using the cur­rent green­house gas account­ing prac­tice for cli­mate plan­ning,” reads the blog post, “we’d like for the City to esti­mate the life­cy­cle emis­sions (a.k.a. as cra­dle-to-grave emis­sions) for each ener­gy source.”

“The net green­house gas effects of bioenergy…depend crit­i­cal­ly on non-com­bus­tion relat­ed fac­tors, includ­ing the source of the bio­mass and the rel­e­vant land-use effects,” accord­ing to the post. Acknowl­edg­ing the dif­fi­cul­ty of pre­cise account­ing for this com­pli­cat­ed issue, 350 Ver­mont rec­om­mend­ed that the City “take imme­di­ate steps to make car­bon account­ing more trans­par­ent by includ­ing an esti­mat­ed range of life­cy­cle emis­sions for each rel­e­vant ener­gy source.”

The cli­mate organization’s post also refers to “fugi­tive emis­sions” from burn­ing nat­ur­al gas at the facil­i­ty, explain­ing that McNeil’s car­bon foot­print “may not just be a few per­cent larg­er, but sev­er­al-fold larg­er, than con­ven­tion­al esti­mates indicate.”

Specif­i­cal­ly, the group urges Burling­ton to “lead oth­er cities” by explain­ing their cur­rent car­bon account­ing for the Cli­mate Action Plan, includ­ing the “actu­al car­bon diox­ide smoke­stack emis­sions from the McNeil Sta­tion, as cal­cu­lat­ed by the U.S. Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency,” and by pro­vid­ing esti­mat­ed ranges of emissions.

McNeil Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion is joint­ly owned by Burling­ton Elec­tric Depart­mentGreen Moun­tain Pow­er (recent­ly acquired by Gaz Metro of Cana­da), and Ver­mont Pub­lic Pow­er Sup­ply Author­i­ty


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