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Manomet Team Releases Study of Woody Biomass in Massachusetts

The Biomass Energy Resource Center (BERC) was a partner on the study performed for the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources, led by the Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences (Manomet) along with other organizations and partners, including the Pinchot Institute for Conservation, the Forest Guild, and consulting forest and resource economists. 
 
BERC’s role included the following:
  • Analysis of the technology scenarios and direct carbon emissions for various biomass energy technologies and their fossil fuel equivalents (Chapter 2).
  • Analysis of existing public policy at the state and federal levels (Chapter 1).
  • Review of the wood supply analysis (Chapter 3), although BERC did not have a role in selecting the methodology used.
The policy actions and recommendations as expressed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts come entirely from the Commonwealth, not the study. The study was commissioned only to provide information and analysis, not policy recommendations.  
 
At the highest level, the study supports three important conclusions regarding the carbon and sustainable forestry implications of biomass:
  • There is a carbon “debt” when biomass is burned for energy, i.e., burning carbon often releases more carbon at the time of combustion than an equivalent amount of fossil fuel and it takes a certain amount of time (specific to both the type of fuel used and the energy technology) to “recover” that debt by re-sequestering that additional carbon. Beyond this point, the continued sequestration of carbon makes the combustion of biomass carbon-beneficial as compared to fossil fuels.
  • It is not accurate to simply consider biomass energy “carbon neutral.” The carbon implications and/or benefits of biomass energy depend entirely on several factors, including: where the wood comes from, applied forest management practices, how harvesting and management are distributed over the landscape and over time, and the types of technology used. The study clarifies that, when biomass is sustainably harvested and forest lands are well managed overtime, biomass can be a source of low carbon energy, especially when compared to fossil fuels.
  • In using biomass, biomass for heat and cogeneration is the use that is most efficient in reducing greenhouse gas emissions over time compared to fossil fuels. Using biomass for electric generation has a slower payback period, taking  longer to show carbon-emission benefits.

    • The use of sustainably harvested biomass to replace oil heat would begin to yield benefits in as little as five years, with a 25 percent net benefit over oil by the year 2050. Use of biomass to make electricity takes longer—about 42 years—to begin to create a net dividend compared to coal, but with a positive carbon dividend of 19 percent by the year 2100.
       
      IMPORTANT NOTE: The Associated Press (AP) story by Steve LeBlanc, and subsequent reporting by much of the media, stated: “A new study has found that wood-burning power plants using trees and other ‘biomass’ from New England forests release more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than coal over time.” This statement is incorrect. The study shows that woody biomass for energy initially has higher CO2 emissions than the fossil fuel equivalent, but, as noted above, over time this carbon “debt” is recovered and becomes a carbon “dividend” in all scenarios analyzed. As noted below, the study also only looked at green woody biomass from forests. It did not look at “other biomass” as suggested by AP, much of which may add no new carbon to the equation (example: forest residues or other wood that would decompose quickly anyway). Finally, the headline associated with the AP report: “Mass. Study: Wood Power Worse Polluter than Coal” is not a conclusion that can be gleaned from this study, and is entirely inaccurate. Pollution includes other emissions of concern present in coal and absent in wood, such as mercury, arsenic, and sulfur dioxides that were not considered in this study.
As with any study of this kind, there are key assumptions that must be understood that affect how the study should be used and interpreted. For the most part, these are explicitly described in the study, but include:
  • The study makes no distinction between carbon already in the atmospheric cycle and geologic carbon currently sequestered, and the study does not attempt to address the implications of loading the atmospheric system with new additive carbon from geologically sequestered sources (e.g., fossil fuels).
  • The wood supply analysis is an economic and social analysis of how much wood is likely to be available in Massachusetts. It does not provide an assessment of how much wood is actually available on an ecological basis in Massachusetts, which is considerably more.
  • Forest harvesting and carbon recovery rates are specific to Massachusetts’ land base and are not applicable elsewhere.
  • All harvesting examples assume “business as usual (BAU)” continues, with biomass harvesting added to the BAU case, so there is no analysis about what biomass harvesting alone might look like and no change in harvesting methods for biomass relative to other harvesting. In other words, there was no attempt to optimize the harvesting of biomass and forest management relative to CO2.
  • This study addresses CO2 only. Mercury, arsenic, sulfur dioxide, particulates, etc. were not evaluated.
  • A key assumption in calculating the relative benefits of burning wood versus fossil fuel is that in the fossil fuel examples, forests must remain forests for the fossil fuel debt to be as low as it is. When burning fossil fuels, those forests are assumed to be there storing carbon on behalf of the fossil fuels. 
  Below are links to the study and other information:


 
Momentous Decision
The Herald of Randolph, July 16, 2009
Editorial
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Randolph Seeks $18 Million for Wood-Heat District
The Herald of Randolph, July 16, 2009
By M.D. Drysdale
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$10 Million Energy Grant Could Come Randolph's Way
The Herald of Randolph, June 25, 2009
By M.D. Drysdale
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Wood Seen as Viable Heating Source for Some Public Buildings Here
Bethel Citizen (Bethel, Maine), May 7, 2009
By Alison Aloisio
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Heating the Village
The Herald of Randolph
Editorial/Comment, April 23, 2009
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Wood Heat District Proposed for Randolph
The Herald of Randolph, April 23, 2009
By M.D. Drysdale
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Biomass Energy - Could Heat Downtown
The Herald of Randolph, April 16, 2009
By M.D. Drysdale
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Renewable Energy Options for Randolph
The Herald of Randolph, April 16, 2009
By M.D. Drysdale
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VTC Reconsiders Schoolhouse Plans
The Herald of Randolph, April 16, 2009
By Sandy Vondrasek
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The Future of Wood Chip Energy
Vermont Public Radio, Vermont Edition, April 6, 2009
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Center Residents Critical of VTC's Pellet Boiler Plan
The Herald of Randolph, March 19, 2009
By Sandy Vondrasek
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Grafton County Explores Alternative Heat
Caledonian Record
Robert Blechl, Staff Writer, February 11, 2009
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County considers $2.1 million renewable heating option
The Journal Opinion (Vermont/New Hampshire), Online Edition, February 4, 2009
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Study: Wood Heat Could Cut Costs
Valley News, February 1, 2009
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Calais Inventor Brings Wood Chips to Schools
Rutland Herald & Times Argus, December 14, 2008
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A Wood-Fueled Future?
The Montpelier Bridge, November 6, 2008
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Hot topic: Wood or pellets?
Champlain Business Journal, November 2008
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Romancing the Stove: Vermonters’ Ardor for Wood Heat Returns
The Montpelier Bridge, September 18, 2008
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Wood Chips Keep Schools Warm
By Hamilton E. Davis
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Vermont Funds Biomass Projects: The Central Vermont Public Service utility recently approved $500,000 in renewable energy projects
Biomass Magazine,  August 8, 2008 at 9:14 a.m. CST 
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Finding value in lumber leftovers
Marketplace, National Public Radio, August 6, 2008
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Schools may switch to energy efficient heating system with federal help
Vermont Pubic Radio, June 17, 2008
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Reading, writing and renewables: Vermont schools lead the way on alternative energy
Rutland Herald/Times Argus, Vermont, May 25, 2008
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Energy from Local Wood and Grasses?
The Herald of Randolph, May 15, 2008
By M.D. Drysdale
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School Board considers installing biomass boiler
Bennington Banner (Vermont), March 15, 2008
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Vermont organization develops tool to assess biomass supply
Web exclusive posted Feb. 28, 2008, at 9:24 p.m. CST
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Wood chips fuel STAR Academy
Custer County Chronicle (South Dakota), January 16, 2008
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School picks firm for $1.02 million wood chip system
Waterbury Record, November 14, 2007
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Few join next generation of loggers: Experts fear loss of region’s ‘working forests’ to wave of retirements
Hill Country Observer, August 2007
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Fuels for Schools and Beyond
Biomass Magazine, August 2007
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Vermont has Plenty of Wood
Mid Day Report with Steve Delany, June 21, 2007
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Biomass Roads Diverging in the Woods: Facing Markets Forces, Will Vermont Choose Sustainability?
Vermont Natural Resources Council: Vermont Environmental Report, Summer 2007
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More schools look to tree debris to heat rooms: Forest Service program uses thinned slash boilers
Associated Press, November 7, 2005
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