August 2025

Inside this issue

FROM THE EDITORS

Seeking Bioenergy

IN THE NEWS
  • Dürr Sells Division To Stellex Capital
  • Forisk Promotes Amanda Lang To President & COO
  • Minnesota’s HREC Catches Fire
  • Proposed California Pellet Mills Hit Snag
  • Weyco Buys Land From Roseburg
  • LP May Provide Fiber To Biorefinery
  • Rayonier Fights City Hall
    AVISTA KETTLE FALLS KEEPS THE FIRE GOING

    KETTLE FALLS, Wash. — Nestled in the Colville Valley beside the picture-perfect Columbia River is one of the oldest continuously running biomass power plants in the U.S.: Avista Kettle Falls Generating Station (KFGS) generates up to 53 MW, enough to power over 38,000 homes. As part of the company’s impressive renewable energy portfolio, KFGS, as the facility is known, plays an important role in the timber-rich area taking approximately 500,000 green tons of residuals annually. The plant is a welcome home for mill byproducts as well as grindings from in-woods operations.

    WOOD ENERGY EVERYWHERE

    Hannover, Germany — Wood pellet production and wood energy systems were prevalent during the LIGNA machinery show held May 26-30 in Hannover, Germany. More than 1,400 exhibitors from 49 countries participated, showcasing their technologies to 78,000 visitors from 56 countries. A significant portion of those exhibitors and attendees represented the global wood energy industry including the likes of Biomass Engineering & Equipment, who now represents Salmatec pelleting systems in North America. Wood Bioenergy magazine once again exhibited at LIGNA —one of the few exclusive wood-to-energy publications in the world to do so.

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    From the Editors

    Seeking Bioenergy

    Ongoing changes in the pulp and paper industry have major implications for the overall wood bioenergy fiber supply chain: A trend toward less roundwood usage and consolidation in containerboard markets and capacity have led to multiple closures around the country and especially in the U.S. Southeast.

    In fact, the most recent large scale closures at International Paper, Georgetown, SC and Campti, La., along with Georgia-Pacific at Cedar Springs, Ga., represent roughly 5% of U.S. containerboard capacity.

    The industry is simply using less virgin fiber for paper and packaging raw material supply: Roundwood and chip consumption for paper and packaging peaked more than a quarter century ago—98 million tons in 2001—and has plummeted to 70 million tons in 2024, according to the Fastmarkets North American Woodfiber & Biomass Markets newsletter.

    South Carolina is ground zero for the shift. In recent years the state has lost paper mills at North Charleston and Georgetown and also been affected by closures at Canton and Riegelwood, NC (plus three sawmills and one plywood plant that closed).

    A study by the South Carolina Forest Recovery Task Force noted that from spring 2023 to fall 2024 closures in state and in North Carolina resulted in a loss of about 8.2 million tons of wood markets—about 25% of the state’s total timber output.

    State landowners and government officials are alarmed, and rightfully so: A healthy market for residuals and small diameter timber is critical for overall forest health and the forest economy and landowners viewing timber as a productive, ongoing investment.

    The closures also have big implications for on-the-ground supply chain operators. Mills like Georgetown, Campti and Cedar Springs all were accepting thousands of loads a month. That keeps a lot of loggers working, providing the volume that can make low cut and haul rates workable.

    Without those markets, loggers are hauling farther and are likely to get hit with hauling quotas as more suppliers chase the remaining still-open mills.

    The report notes that there are South Carolina economic development projects on the drawing board to produce lumber, fiber board, pellets, renewable diesel and more that would account for between 4-5 million tons of wood consumption, so more is definitely needed.

    That’s where wood bioenergy comes in: The state is looking to position itself as a leader in the wood bioeconomy. Legislation to expand energy production has directed utilities to explore biomass-fired power plants. Officials are also commissioning studies to develop a bulk loading terminal in the state, and also a feasibility study on developing SAF production, as well as the possibility of using syngas for electricity production and other products.

    The ongoing investment in timberlands and timber production is huge for so many wood-based industries to have raw materials available in the future. Wood bioenergy provides a key additional application outside the traditional lumber-panel-paper markets for logs. Developing the industry’s potential certainly doesn’t lack for timber availability.

    South Carolina’s search for new wood utilization provides an opportunity to not only repurpose timber for exciting new products but also help define a forest-based economy that’s cleaner and more sustainable.

    These developments, though years after paper mill closures that made their current and upcoming sites and operations viable, are instructive as community leaders in the currently stricken fiber markets surrounding Georgetown, SC (IP closure October 2024), Campti, La. (IP closure February 2025) and now Cedar Springs, Ga. seek alternatives and look for new operators in closed wood markets. Pulp and paper mills are the type of wood-consuming facilities that require the high volumes of small logs that allow logging and chipping contractors to build cost-efficient companies and fiber supply chains to scale in a highly expensive industry. The closure of these types of mills has a way of compounding itself as loggers and fiber suppliers need fewer employees, machines, truck drivers, fill-ups, cold drinks and lunch plates. When a primary market closes, you can only break even or lose money for so long before you have to do something else. And once the fiber supply industry’s markets and infrastructure are phased out (just ask the folks in Arizona), rebuilding productive, growth-oriented capacity is exceedingly difficult. That’s why when Wood Bioenergy companion publication Timber Harvesting, America’s only national logging magazine, notes that in its 2025 Logger Survey 45% of loggers report they broke even or lost money in 2024, procurement managers of all types need to pay attention. As the most recent GP announcement shows, there’s increasing feedstock opportunities in the woods as pulp and paper markets shift, but taking full advantage requires a healthy fiber supply chain from the stump up.

    From Left: Jessica Johnson, Managing Editor; Dan Shell, Senior Editor; Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief; David Abbott, Senior Associate Editor

     

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