Kauai Biomass Facility to Get Fuel from Burned Forest

- by Chris D’Angelo, March 5, 2015, The Gar­den Island

It is unlike any oth­er log­ging oper­a­tion in Hawaii’s history.

And the $90 mil­lion bio­mass-to-ener­gy facil­i­ty the logs are des­tined for is as unique as the project itself, state offi­cials say.

“This is the largest oper­a­tion that we’ve had,” said Lisa Had­way, admin­is­tra­tor of the state Depart­ment of Land and Nat­ur­al Resources’ Divi­sion of Forestry and Wildlife, on a tour of the once-charred grounds Wednes­day. “Giv­en that the bio­mass plant is here on this island, I think this is a great way to help us improve this for­est for recre­ation, for the water­shed and for the restora­tion of this area.”

Now well under­way, the Kokee For­est Restora­tion and Replant­i­ng Project calls for the removal of an esti­mat­ed 15,000 tons of euca­lyp­tus and pine trees from about 300 acres of for­est reserve land scorched dur­ing fires in the sum­mer of 2012, fol­lowed by the replant­i­ng of native and non-inva­sive species.

In Jan­u­ary 2013, for­mer Gov. Neil Aber­crom­bie green-light­ed the project via an emer­gency procla­ma­tion. Its pur­pos­es include “mit­i­gat­ing the post-fire dam­age” from the three blazes that burned about 4,000 acres in the Kokee area and elim­i­nat­ing the threat to pub­lic health and safe­ty from poten­tial­ly dev­as­tat­ing post-fire effects, includ­ing flash flood­ing and erosion.

Iron­i­cal­ly, the black­ened wood from Kokee will soon meet the flame once again — this time as fuel for pow­er­ing the island.

The project, tabbed at around $4 mil­lion start to fin­ish, is far from a mon­ey­mak­er, accord­ing to Had­way. In fact, the $300,000 to $500,000 the state expects to prof­it from the sale of its logs to Green Ener­gy will go direct­ly to replant­i­ng the for­est areas.

“This isn’t about Forestry and Wildlife mak­ing mon­ey,” Had­way said. “This is about Forestry and Wildlife restor­ing a piece of for­est and pre­vent­ing some­thing very sim­i­lar from hap­pen­ing again.”

On Wednesday’s tour, DLNR offi­cials led media mem­bers on a day-long tour of both the log­ging oper­a­tion and Green Ener­gy Team, LLC’s new­ly opened bio­mass facil­i­ty in Koloa.

Craig Wood­ward, pres­i­dent of Prineville, Ore­gon-based Wood­ward Com­pa­nies, the com­pa­ny con­tract­ed to do the log­ging, said that before his crew got to work, the brush was so thick in the impact­ed areas that a per­son couldn’t even crawl through it.

In just three weeks, Wood­ward esti­mat­ed his crew has fall­en about 8,000 tons of wood, an aver­age of about 100 tons per acre. He expects to be fin­ished log­ging by the end of the month, with haul­ing of the logs to Green Ener­gy begin­ning in ear­ly April and last­ing a few months.

While Wood­ward dis­cussed the logis­tics and chal­lenges of a log­ging project of this size, one of his crew worked what is known as a feller bunch­er — a $500,000 machine able to rapid­ly cut sev­er­al trees and fell them at once — in the back­ground. While he worked, a large limb sud­den­ly fell from the tree and land­ed just feet from machine, which is designed to with­stand such an impact and pro­tect its operator.

Wood­ward said falling limbs like that are what log­gers refer to as “wid­ow-mak­ers.”

“Now see, if you had a man on the ground cut­ting that tree, see, he would have been going to the hos­pi­tal,” he said.

The largest trees, ones a feller bunch­er can’t take down, are left to life­long log­ger John Ontko. With what seems like lit­tle effort, Ontko approach­es the base of a mon­ster euca­lyp­tus, makes a series of pre­cise cuts chest high on the trunk with his chain­saw, then casu­al­ly steps away as the butt of it begins to snap.

“Tim­ber!” Wood­ward shouted.

The tree falls exact­ly where it’s sup­posed to. Limbs splin­ter as it smash­es into the ground.

Like all the oth­ers, this tree will make its way to the Green Ener­gy plant, where it will be chipped and used as fuel for the state-of-the-art facility.

Plant Man­ag­er Ran­dolph Singer said the facil­i­ty, which began test­ing last month and is expect­ed to be con­nect­ed to the Kauai Island Util­i­ty Coop­er­a­tive grid ear­ly next month, is the first of its kind in the Unit­ed States and one of only sev­er­al “closed-loop” sys­tems in the world.

“We own the entire process,” he said. “We own from seed to ash. It’s all owned by the com­pa­ny, com­plete­ly con­tained on the island. We don’t go off island for any sources. We don’t have to con­stant­ly search and nego­ti­ate and look for fuel in oth­er places. This is closed-loop. We own the sup­ply. We grow the sup­ply, the trees are grown express­ly for this pur­pose and this pur­pose only. It’s a crop.”

Gilles Lebbe, Green Energy’s bio­mass sup­ply man­ag­er, said 50 per­cent of the facility’s fuel will come from the Kalepa area, up by Wailua Falls. The oth­er half will come from the area sur­round­ing the facil­i­ty. The wood from Kokee rep­re­sents only a small por­tion — about 17 per­cent — of what is need­ed in a giv­en year.

“We have enough fuel for 20 years, with plan­ta­tions, with clear­ing rights,” Lebbe said. “And we have small win­dows of oppor­tu­ni­ty in case KIUC takes more pow­er than we com­mit­ted to deliver.”

While KIUC com­mit­ted to take 6.7 megawatts, the plant is built to pro­duce up to 7.5, about 12 per­cent of the island’s elec­tric­i­ty — enough to pow­er 8,500 house­holds and replace about 3.7 mil­lion gal­lons of import­ed oil annually.

Asked why Green Ener­gy decid­ed to build the facil­i­ty on Kauai, Singer said the cli­mate is per­fect for grow­ing trees.

“These trees around us are only about 6 years old,” he said, point­ing to tow­er­ing albizias. “The trees grow extreme­ly fast here … So we can have a short rota­tion crop.”

Sec­ond­ly, he said, Kauai’s depen­den­cy on import­ed oil makes the eco­nom­ic incen­tive right for the project.

Com­pared to a con­ven­tion­al pow­er plant, the bio­mass facil­i­ty releas­es far less sulfer diox­ide and nitro­gen diox­ide, accord­ing to Singer. Addi­tion­al­ly, the ash — which will weigh between 1 and 3 per­cent of the over­all ton­nage burned — will be recy­cled as fer­til­iz­er for the trees that Green Ener­gy will grow.

By the time the facil­i­ty goes online in April, DOFAW is expect­ed to be haul­ing tim­ber from Kokee. Up to 10 log­ging trucks per day will trav­el between the refor­esta­tion site and the plant.

Had­way and Patrick Porter, the Kauai forestry man­ag­er for DOFAW, said if it were not for the bio­mass plant being built, the impact­ed areas in Kokee would have remained a major haz­ard. With nowhere to take the logs, the state would have like­ly been lim­it­ed to doing fuel reduc­tion and thin­ning undergrowth.

“We wouldn’t have tried to con­vert it back to native,” Porter said of the scorched for­est. “We would have just man­aged it as it was before.”

“You real­ly need a local use of the tim­ber to make it fea­si­ble,” Had­way added.


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