If You Build It, They Will Cut

Gen­er­at­ing bio­mass ener­gy doesn’t result in more log­ging, accord­ing to the bio­mass indus­try, whose spokesper­sons claim facil­i­ties only make use of “waste” wood already com­ing from exist­ing log­ging operations.

Ron Kotr­ba, Senior Edi­tor for Pel­let Mill Mag­a­zine, wrote in the May/June 2015 issue that bio­mass is the “most unlike­ly of the for­est prod­ucts to dri­ve the gen­er­al prac­tice of forestry in the U.S.”

Kotr­ba believes that the notion of bio­mass “dri­ving forestry prac­tices in the U.S. is a pur­pose­ful­ly decep­tive scare tac­tic used by some in an attempt to influ­ence the per­cep­tions of pol­i­cy mak­ers and the public.”

Chris Mat­era, direc­tor of Mass­a­chu­setts For­est Watch, a grass­roots for­est advo­ca­cy group based in Northamp­ton, has long warned that “wood fueled bio­mass ener­gy will add tremen­dous pres­sure, and fur­ther degrade already stressed forests.”

“Exist­ing wood-fueled bio­mass facil­i­ties already cut and burn enor­mous amounts of whole trees for fuel,” said Mat­era, “and any new facil­i­ties will only add more log­ging pressure.” 

Clear­ly, opin­ions dif­fer among the bio­mass indus­try and its crit­ics, leav­ing the ques­tion: do bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties increase logging?

Fed­er­al and state agency per­son­nel, along with mem­bers of the bio­mass indus­try, have made state­ments demon­strat­ing that the con­struc­tion of a bioen­er­gy facil­i­ty is like­ly to result in a local increase in log­ging, includ­ing in Nation­al Forests, by open­ing an addi­tion­al mar­ket for the sale of trees that might have oth­er­wise been left in the for­est to grow.

Brad Flat­ten, Stew­ard­ship and Tim­ber Sales Spe­cial­ist for the Okanogan-Wenatchee Nation­al For­est, was quot­ed in “Wood Sup­ply Assess­ment for Com­mer­cial-Scale Bio­mass Pow­er Cogen­er­a­tion and Bio­mass Uti­liza­tion Projects in Cen­tral Wash­ing­ton,” say­ing the estab­lish­ment of bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties in Wash­ing­ton state “may pro­vide a mar­ket for small-diam­e­ter mate­r­i­al typ­i­cal­ly gen­er­at­ed from fuels treatment…and poten­tial­ly increase the num­ber of treat­ment acres.”

In oth­er words, con­tro­ver­sial “fuel reduc­tion” log­ging projects, which many sci­en­tif­ic stud­ies sug­gest aren’t effec­tive at reduc­ing the like­li­hood of a large wild­fire, may expand in scale if a bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ty will pur­chase the trees.

Bio­mass ener­gy, said Eric Lam­fers of the Wash­ing­ton Depart­ment of Nat­ur­al Resources in the “Wood Sup­ply” doc­u­ment, “affords treat­ment of areas that nor­mal­ly could not be treat­ed with­out mar­ket-based oppor­tu­ni­ties.” This state­ment also makes it evi­dent that some Wash­ing­ton forests would be left unlogged with­out the exis­tence of bio­mass ener­gy facilities.

Wind Riv­er Bio­mass, a com­bined heat and pow­er bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ty pro­posed for Steven­son, Wash­ing­ton, plans to source trees from the near­by Gif­ford Pin­chot Nation­al Forest.

A bio­mass gasi­fi­ca­tion project in North Fork, Cal­i­for­nia that would burn trees to cre­ate elec­tric­i­ty, heat and biochar would also increase log­ging, includ­ing in the Sier­ra Nation­al For­est, accord­ing to a May 6, 2015 arti­cle in the Sier­ra Star.

Jim Bran­ham, exec­u­tive offi­cer for the Sier­ra Neva­da Con­ser­van­cy, one of the enti­ties behind the North Fork facil­i­ty, was quot­ed as say­ing that bio­mass projects such as his are “key to increas­ing the pace and scale of for­est restora­tion and pro­tect­ing our forests and com­mu­ni­ties from large, dam­ag­ing wild­fires.” Once again, a bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ty is act­ing as a dri­ver for more “fuel reduc­tion” log­ging projects.

While some bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties spur log­ging in antic­i­pa­tion of the nat­ur­al process of wild­fire, oth­er facil­i­ties trig­ger log­ging after a burn. For exam­ple, a new bio­mass facil­i­ty in Kauai drove the cut­ting and burn­ing of 15,000 tons of pine and euca­lyp­tus trees in Kokee that wouldn’t have been logged oth­er­wise, accord­ing to March 5, 2015 arti­cle in the Wash­ing­ton Times.

An April 4, 2015 arti­cle in Tim­ber­line report­ed that Water­town, New York-based wood chip­ping com­pa­ny, Pala Wood Ser­vice Com­pa­ny, “had all but stopped chip­ping [trees] due to a lack of a cus­tomer base for that prod­uct.” Yet, accord­ing to Pala Wood’s own­er, Bruce Strough, the recent open­ing of ReEn­er­gy Black Riv­er, a 60-megawatt bio­mass pow­er facil­i­ty in Fort Drum, “rep­re­sent­ed an oppor­tu­ni­ty to get back into the market.”

As more bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ties are built across the U.S., includ­ing ones in close prox­im­i­ty to Nation­al Forests, only time will tell whether we’ll see a result­ing uptick in log­ging pro­pos­als, as bio­mass oppo­nents warn. But, if state­ments by those work­ing on the ground to advance bioen­er­gy are accu­rate, more log­ging specif­i­cal­ly to fuel these facil­i­ties is probable. 


Posted

in

by


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.

Related Projects

Watch Us on YouTube