Arizona Groups Seek To Break ‘Biomass Bottleneck’
A group of local governments, timber industry representatives and environmental groups recently met with congressional leaders and U.S. Forest Service officials to indicate that Arizona’s forest health efforts and industry infrastructure face collapse unless a new market for biomass is created in the state.
Two recently released reports emphasize forest health dynamics in the state and the need to unclog a “biomass bottleneck” to keep restoration projects moving.
Reports from the Eastern Arizona Counties Organization and the Natural Resources Working Group in the White Mountains, and another from the Greater Flagstaff Forest Partnership (GFFP) and the Forest Biomass Coalition Working Group both agree construction of a large biomass power plant is the best way to maintain forest restoration activities in the state.
Eastern Arizona Counties Organization Executive Director Pascal Berlioux voiced concern about delays. His group stressed the need for a second biomass burning plant back in December.
Berlioux noted that state interests are in agreement on the solution, but the “elephant in the room” is who will buy the power from such a plant. Several companies have expressed interest in building if power offtake purchase agreements can be secured. Supporters say millions of acres of overgrown Arizona forest are at risk of high-intensity wildfire, along with the communities and watersheds they support. The report says that a fiberboard or biocarbon plant may eventually be built, but only a second biomass-burning plant near Flagstaff or Winslow offers a proven, near-term solution.
The existing Novo Biopower plant in Snowflake processes enough material to support thinning approximately 15,000 acres per year. Restoration advocates say meaningful progress requires thinning 40,000 acres annually, which would require additional biomass disposal capacity and assurances sufficient to attract private investment in a second 30 MW plant.
The objective is a big one: Ongoing forest health operations within the 2.5-million-acre Four Forest Restoration Initiative area, which includes the Kaibab, Tonto, Coconino and Apache-Sitgreaves national forests. “It is important to note that our endorsement of bioenergy does not preclude support for future utilization options,” the report states.
The latest recommendations align with a December report from the Natural Resources Working Group, endorsed by most loggers, mill owners and county governments within the 2.5-million-acre Four Forest Restoration Initiative (4FRI) area.
Latest news
Biomass Machines Debut At Oregon Logging Conference
Suppliers and vendors of biomass processing equipment were well represented at this year’s Oregon Logging Conference in Eugene, Oregon in late February. The logging industry’s biggest equipment show featured a wide variety of logging systems and harvesting and processing equipment…
Enviva Issues Statement Following Destructive Weather In Mississippi
Enviva Inc. has reported that all of its associates are safe and accounted for following a strong tornado that touched down in Amory, Miss., on March 24, 2023. The storm did, however, damage the company’s 115,000 metric ton per year wood pellet production facility, although Enviva’s larger plants and ports in…
Renova Delays New Biomass Plant Startup
Japan renewable power producer Renova Inc recently announced is postponing the launch of commercial operation of the 74.8-MW Tokushima-Tsuda biomass-fired power plant to some time in May 2023. Initially scheduled for a March 2023 startup, the plant is undergoing machine inspections, according to Renova…
Spectrum Moves Ahead At Adel
Spectrum Energy Georgia LLC plans to begin construction this summer of an industrial wood pellet facility in Adel, Ga. and expects to commission the plant 12 months later, or summer of 2024. The plant will operate at the site of an idled particleboard facility…
Find Us On Social
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
Wood Bioenergy News Online hits the inboxes of subscribers in the wood-to-energy sectors.
Subscribe/Renew
Wood Bioenergy is published and delivered worldwide 6 times per year. Free to qualified readers in the U.S. Subscribers outside the U.S. are asked to pay a small fee.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.