Restoration Fuels Closes Central Oregon Biochar Plant
Restoration Fuels in John Day, Ore. has closed its doors as of mid July, laying off 11 employees in a move that closely follows the closure of Malheur Lumber in town. Restoration Fuels, a subsidiary of the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities, initially produced torrefied wood which ideally would have been destined to a converted coal-fired power plant along the Columbia River. The plant had gone as far as providing material for test burns as the potential conversion was analyzed. However, Portland Gas & Electric decided not to convert the power plant, leaving the torrefaction plant without a viable market.
Instead, Restoration Fuels in 2021 switched to producing biochar for soil amendments and industrial applications. The facility was in the process of establishing and expanding markets. However, the biochar plant, which is located adjacent Malheur Lumber, relied on sawdust and chips from the sawmill for its raw material supply. That evaporated when Malheur Lumber announced its closure earlier in July.
Despite the closure, plant officials say the facility had proven the torrefaction process using a thermal oxidizer that burns syngas to heat the torrefier and chip dryer for an overall smaller carbon footprint. In a 2022 feature article in Wood Bioenergy, plant officials said the facility offers a scalable solution to forest health issues, specifically the need to process low-grade biomass in addition to small logs generated from thinning projects, that could be replicated anywhere there are forest health challenges and a lack of local markets.
Latest news
Election May Give New Hope For Arizona Biomass
A major reshuffling of candidates for the Arizona Corporation Commission may bring new life to a derailed effort that would expand biomass utilization in the state to help facilitate much-needed forest thinning and restoration efforts. A state court judge recently threw multiple candidates off the ballot due to irregularities in signature-gathering, including an incumbent and the commission’s biggest biomass supporter…
Alaska Coal Firm Acquires Pellet Mill
Officials with Alaska-based Usibelli Mines, Inc. recently announced the company has acquired Superior Pellet Fuels of Fairbanks, which produces wood pellets and briquettes for local markets. New Usibelli…
SUNY Cobleskill Gasifier Wins $5.8M Wildfire Grant
A $5.8 million grant from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection was awarded to the State University of New York (SUNY) at Cobleskill for a gasifier project that converts woody biomass into clean burning fuel. The grant project is led by SUNY Cobleskill visiting professor David Waage and uses his patented inclined rotary gasifier, initially funded by…
Enviva Publishes Paper, Hosts Webinar
On May 27, Jennifer Jenkins, Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer, Enviva, and Roger Ballentine, President, Green Strategies, hosted a webinar based on a paper the two published May 6 called Seeing The Forest: Sustainable Wood Bioenergy In The Southeast U.S. The hour and a half long presentation touched on the major topics of the paper, while also including a question and answer portion from participants…
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.