Nova Scotia Power Biomass in Cape Breton Raising Green Concerns

- by Aaron Beswick, Jan­u­ary 9, 2015, The Chron­i­cle Herald

About 2,790 hectares.

That’s a rough esti­mate of how much wood­land will need to be cut annu­al­ly to feed Nova Sco­tia Power’s bio­mass boil­er at Point Tupper.

“It seems that more of the fears are com­ing true than the ben­e­fits we had envi­sioned from that facil­i­ty,” said Kari East­house, man­ag­er of the Cape Bre­ton Pri­vate Land Partnership.

Foresters in north­ern Nova Sco­tia are warn­ing that the wood being burned at Nova Sco­tia Power’s new bio­mass boil­er may be green, but the elec­tric­i­ty com­ing out of it isn’t.

The boil­er, start­ed by now-defunct New­Page Port Hawkes­bury Corp. and sold to Nova Sco­tia Pow­er, opened dur­ing the sum­mer of 2013. Run­ning at peak capac­i­ty, which it is a bit shy of now, it burns 670,000 green tonnes of wood fibre annu­al­ly to pro­duce 60 megawatts of electricity.

“They’re going after any­thing they can get their hands on to feed that thing,” Phil Clark, an Antigo­nish Coun­ty sawmill oper­a­tor, said Thursday.

“They’re lay­ing places to waste to feed it.”

The boil­er was sold to Nova Sco­tians as a way to throw one stone at two birds.

First off, because trees grow back, it would help the province reach its renew­able ener­gy tar­gets. Sec­ond­ly, it would pro­vide a mar­ket for wood not want­ed for pulp and paper.

“By pro­vid­ing a mar­ket for the low-qual­i­ty wood, the idea was that it would cre­ate oppor­tu­ni­ties to do treat­ments to increase the health and val­ue of the for­est,” said Easthouse.

“That isn’t what appears to be happening.”

What does is land get­ting cut sole­ly to feed the boiler.

Accord­ing to Nova Sco­tia Pow­er, half the boiler’s needs are fed by wood waste from Port Hawkes­bury Paper, sawmills and oth­er woods oper­a­tions. That leaves about 335,000 green tonnes that are cut to feed it.

A rough indus­try aver­age in north­ern Nova Sco­tia is that you get about 120 tonnes of wood fibre off a hectare. Divide 335,000 tonnes by 120 and you get 2,792 hectares get­ting cut every year for the fore­see­able future to be burned for elec­tric­i­ty in a fur­nace that works at about 74per cent efficiency.

“You’ve got to be care­ful with aver­ages,” Allan Eddy, asso­ciate deputy min­is­ter at the Nat­ur­al Resources Depart­ment, warned Thurs­day. “If you shoot two feet in front of a duck and then two feet behind a duck, on aver­age that duck is dead.”

How­ev­er, Eddy acknowl­edged that land is being cleared to feed the bio­mass boiler.

He paint­ed it as a mat­ter of eco­nom­ics that couldn’t have been pre­dict­ed before the plant opened and that is like­ly to change for the bet­ter in years to come.

Eddy said the shake­up of the province’s for­est indus­try over the last five years has result­ed in a severe decline in the province’s har­vest­ing capac­i­ty. The New­Page Port Hawkes­bury bank­rupt­cy and the clo­sure of Liverpool’s Bowa­ter Mersey mill result­ed in a lot of har­vest­ing con­trac­tors jump­ing ship from the for­est industry.

“For every 10 logs that the mills need cut, there’s the capac­i­ty to cut sev­en or (sev­en and a half) logs,” said Eddy.

That puts a pre­mi­um on har­vest­ing capacity.

He said Nova Sco­tia Pow­er has an oblig­a­tion to its ratepay­ers to get wood fibre as cheap­ly as pos­si­ble. The cheap­est way is to clear land, not selec­tive­ly har­vest to improve the lot for the future.

“Do all Nova Sco­tians who pay pow­er bills want to pay a high­er pow­er bill so that they can help us improve our for­est?” said Eddy.

“I don’t think there’s a guilty par­ty. … The bio­mass plant is prob­a­bly more of an oppor­tu­ni­ty than it is a prob­lem, at this stage of the game. We’re still a lit­tle ways away from achiev­ing the oppor­tu­ni­ties we envisioned.”

East­house agrees that the bio­mass plant still presents an oppor­tu­ni­ty if the har­vest­ing meth­ods are changed.

He also said the best thing to do with some stands, like those of bee­tle-dam­aged white spruce, is to clear them off and start fresh.

But that will require a vision for the future that’s not being shown now, he said.


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