More California Biomass Facilities Closing

- by Seth Nide­v­er, March 26, 2015, Han­ford Sentinel

[Notice not a sin­gle men­tion of health and envi­ron­men­tal impacts of bio­mass facil­i­ties. ‑Josh] 

Once upon a time, local orchard farm­ers tak­ing out trees piled them up in large heaps and struck a match, send­ing huge plumes of smoke into the air.

More recent­ly, the waste has gone to bio­mass pow­er plants that crank out elec­tric­i­ty, meet stricter air pol­lu­tion require­ments and pro­vide a renew­able ener­gy component.

But now that the whole bio­mass indus­try in Cal­i­for­nia is threat­ened with extinc­tion, the issue has become a hot top­ic in the ag industry.

Grow­ers are ask­ing: If you can’t burn orchard trees that have been removed, and you’ve got no bio­mass plant to send them to, where does it all go?

“They just pile up,” said Dino Gia­co­mazzi, Kings Coun­ty Farm Bureau pres­i­dent. “Cur­rent­ly, bio­mass plants are about the only way we have to dis­pose of orchard removal.”

About 10,000 tons of Kings Coun­ty orchard waste went to a facil­i­ty in Men­do­ta annu­al­ly before it closed last year, accord­ing to Matt Barnes, a spokesman for Cov­an­ta, a com­pa­ny that owns the Men­do­ta facil­i­ty, one in Delano and three oth­er plants in California.

Barnes said that about 1,500 tons of Kings Coun­ty waste has gone to the Delano facil­i­ty so far in 2015. That’s the only facil­i­ty Cov­an­ta is still oper­at­ing in California.

There’s no guar­an­tee it’ll stay open.

When bio­mass plants hit their hey­day in the 1970s and 1980s, there were more than 50 in the state. But as nat­ur­al gas has got­ten cheap­er and sub­si­dized wind and solar ener­gy have become wide­ly avail­able, util­i­ties have less incen­tive to pur­chase the more expen­sive pow­er that bio­mass facil­i­ties provide.

So the plants have been clos­ing down, one at a time, as con­tracts expire and util­i­ties choose not to renew.

There are only about 20 oper­a­tional plants left, accord­ing to Barnes.

“The issue is, there’s this whole ecosys­tem of the bio­mass plants,” he said. “It’s not just that the [elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­a­tion] goes away. Do we go back to open burning?”

In the ear­ly 2000s, the San Joaquin Val­ley Air Pol­lu­tion Con­trol Dis­trict start­ed crack­ing down on open burn­ing – a strat­e­gy that dove­tailed nice­ly with the bio­mass plants, because now grow­ers could send their waste there.

Those plants, like oth­er emis­sions sources, are reg­u­lat­ed by the dis­trict. Accord­ing to Barnes, they remove 90 per­cent to 95 per­cent of the pol­lu­tion open burn­ing would release into the air.

The air dis­trict deter­mined that the removal of orchard waste to bio­mass plants was an eco­nom­i­cal­ly and tech­no­log­i­cal­ly fea­si­ble alter­na­tive to burning.

“If we were to lose a sub­stan­tial amount of our bio­mass capac­i­ty, we would need to find oth­er alter­na­tive uses,” said Tom Jor­dan, a senior pol­i­cy advi­sor at the air district.

Jor­dan said there are some exper­i­men­tal alter­na­tives, such as con­vert­ing the waste into bio­gas, but they aren’t com­mer­cial­ly avail­able on a wide scale.

Send­ing the waste to land­fills is not con­sid­ered fea­si­ble because of the large vol­ume involved.

“To haul it to the land­fill, we’re going to fill it up in about three min­utes,” said Harley Phillips, man­ag­er of Wil­son Ag, a Shafter-based com­pa­ny that offers tree removal service.

The issue may take on greater urgency with drought. Nut crops – and the year-round water demand they gen­er­ate – have explod­ed in Kings Coun­ty acreage in the last decade. More orchards are expect­ed to be removed as some farm­ers find they can’t afford to pay ris­ing water costs.

“That’s going to be an unfor­tu­nate real­i­ty of the per­sis­tence of this drought,” said Assem­bly­man Rudy Salas, D‑Bakersfield.

Salas said he’s sign­ing on as a joint author of AB 590, a mea­sure intro­duced in the Assem­bly last month by Assem­bly­man Bri­an Dahle, R‑Redding. It would fun­nel cap-and-trade rev­enue into sub­si­dies for the plants, like­ly bring­ing some of the recent­ly closed facil­i­ties back online.

The bill has farm bureau sup­port. The air dis­trict hasn’t offi­cial­ly signed on yet, but Jor­dan said dis­trict offi­cials agree in prin­ci­ple with the concept.

In its cur­rent form, the bill doesn’t include a dol­lar amount that would be set aside to sup­port bio­mass facilities.

Salas said a mon­e­tary fig­ure will be going into the bill’s lan­guage soon. It’s cur­rent­ly being con­sid­ered by the nat­ur­al resources com­mit­tee and the util­i­ties and com­merce com­mit­tee in the Assembly.

“The alter­na­tive is gath­er­ing up mil­lions of tons of orchards and burn­ing them,” Salas said.


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