Forests Could Face Threat from Biomass Power “Gold Rush”

Forests Could Face Threat from Bio­mass Pow­er “Gold Rush”

- by Jamie Doward, The Observ­er

Britain’s new gen­er­a­tion of bio­mass pow­er sta­tions will have to source mil­lions of tonnes of wood from thou­sands of miles away if they are to oper­ate near to their full capac­i­ty, rais­ing ques­tions about the claims made for the sus­tain­abil­i­ty of the new technology.

Min­is­ters believe bio­mass tech­nol­o­gy could pro­vide as much as 11% of the UK’s ener­gy by 2020, some­thing that would help it meet its car­bon com­mit­ments. The Envi­ron­ment Agency esti­mates that bio­mass-fired elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­a­tion, most of which involves burn­ing wood pel­lets, can cut green­house gas emis­sions by up to 90% com­pared with coal-fired pow­er sta­tions. Eight bio­mass pow­er sta­tions, includ­ing one in a unit in the giant Drax pow­er sta­tion, are oper­at­ing in the UK and a fur­ther sev­en are in the pipeline. None oper­ates near capacity.

But now envi­ron­men­tal groups are ques­tion­ing where the new plants will source their wood if the tech­nol­o­gy takes off. A cam­paign group, Bio­fu­el­watch, cal­cu­lates in a new report that the UK could end up burn­ing as much as 82m tonnes of bio­mass each year – more than eight times the UK’s annu­al wood pro­duc­tion. If Drax were to oper­ate at full capac­i­ty, it alone would get through 16m tonnes of wood a year, accord­ing to the report, which claims a Europe-wide demand for bio­mass is trig­ger­ing a “gold rush” for wood pel­lets that could have impli­ca­tions for glob­al land use.

The report high­lights the exam­ple of Por­tu­gal, where 10% of the coun­try is now cov­ered by euca­lyp­tus plan­ta­tions much of which is used for bio­mass ener­gy pro­duc­tion. Two cam­paign groups, the Dog­wood Alliance and the US Nat­ur­al Resources Defence Coun­cil, have issued crit­i­cal reports about the way that forests in the south­ern states of the US are being used for bio­mass pro­duc­tion. There are also con­cerns that tracts of Brazil are being used to sup­ply the wood pellets.

But the con­cerns have been fierce­ly reject­ed by the bio­mass indus­try. Envi­va, which sup­plies Drax with wood pel­lets, said its bio­mass came main­ly from off­cuts from poor-qual­i­ty trees that are left over from those grown for the con­struc­tion and paper indus­tries. It said it would be uneco­nom­ic to cut down forests pure­ly for bio­mass and that the cost of ship­ping a tonne of wood pel­lets from the east coast of the US to the UK was sim­i­lar to trans­port­ing the same amount some 225 miles with­in the UK. It said that even the most opti­mistic fore­casts for glob­al wood pel­let demand sug­gest­ed it would not exceed 40m tonnes – equiv­a­lent to 80m tonnes of wood – a year by 2020.

“Bio­mass is the only renew­able ener­gy source that can replace coal quick­ly and cost-effec­tive­ly, pro­vid­ing the same oper­a­tional ben­e­fits while dra­mat­i­cal­ly improv­ing the envi­ron­men­tal pro­file of ener­gy gen­er­a­tion,” a com­pa­ny spokesman said.

MGT Pow­er, which is behind a pro­posed bio­mass plant on Teesside, poten­tial­ly the largest of its kind in the world, told the Observ­er it had dropped plans to source its wood from Brazil, although it denied this was to do with sus­tain­abil­i­ty concerns.

A spokesman said that bio­mass could be an impor­tant green tech­nol­o­gy for the UK. “We feel very strong­ly that bio­mass can pro­vide ener­gy at low­er prices than off­shore wind,” the spokesman said.


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