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Renewable Energy: Burning US Trees In UK Power Stations

By Roger Harrabin Environment analyst, Georgia, US How American trees end up being burned in UK power stations Swamp forests in the US are being felled to help keep the lights on in the UK. Is this really the best way to combat climate change? Environmentalists are trying to block the expansion of a transatlantic trade bringing American wood to burn in European power stations. The trade is driven by EU rules promoting renewable energy to combat climate change. Many millions of tonnes of wood pellets will soon be shipped annually to help keep the lights on in the UK. Other EU nations may follow. Critics say subsidising wood burning wastes money, does nothing to tackle climate change in the short term, and is wrecking some of the finest forests in the US. I have tracked the controversial trade from the swamp forests of North Carolina to the towering chimneys of the UK’s biggest power station, Drax in Yorkshire, which is converting half its boilers from coal to wood. The implications are complicated and disputed, but it is clear that EU leaders did not have burning American wood in mind when they mandated that 20% of Europe’s energy should come from “renewable” sources. Trees rejected by plantations had found a new market in power stations Environmentalists are preoccupied with the potential effects of the trade on climate change and wildlife. So I travelled with Drax representatives to a timber operation in southern Georgia run by their main supplier, the timber firm Plum Creek. It is the biggest private landowner in the US. Its operations are impressive, from the large-scale nurseries selectively breeding seedlings for vigour and disease-resistance, through to immensely productive plantations. This is among the most effective tree farming in the world. Competition from weeds is eliminated in dark monocrop tree stands where wildlife is scanty. How clean is wood-burning? Drax will burn seven million tonnes of plant material a year. It will have to import 90% of its biomass, mostly from the US. From 2013, the UK Government mandates that biomass burning for power will need to emit no more than 70g CO2/kJ, including emissions from transport and cutting. Drax says it averages 20-75g CO2/kJ. That compares 280g for the average UK coal power station; 122g for North Sea gas; and 193g for Russian piped gas. The government expects subsidy for biomass to be £442m-£736m in 2016/17. Sources: Environment Agency and Friends of the Earth The plantations are thinned and harvested by mechanical giants which cut and throw whole trees as if they were twigs. The trees are planted close to each other to encourage tall straight specimens to reach for the light. These will have most value for planks. As the plantation grows, some trees are removed to make space. The thinned-out trees are of low value. They are traditionally sold to the pulp and paper industry but now there’s a new market – power stations in the UK. The industry contends there is plenty of low-grade material to source pulp and power, but some studies suggest that this may be wishful thinking. Critics fear that increasing demand from power generators will encourage foresters to take land that is currently growing food. Their other fear is that plantation forests will replace even more of the natural forests of the southern US, which are already dwindling fast. Environmentalist Derb Carter shows Roger Harrabin swamp trees in Georgia I drove with environmentalists at dawn to a gorgeous swamp forest in North Carolina. The birdsong was entrancing, and a scarce prothonatory warbler – known as the swamp canary – danced before our TV lens. The wood fuel industry has not advertised that it also takes trees from natural forests like this to boil kettles in Britain – but that’s what happens. Most of the swamp forests in south-east US are in the hands of small private landowners and they face few restrictions on what they do with their assets. It is said that local landowners cut their forest twice; once when their daughter gets married and once when they retire. Cutting typically means clear-cutting, and that leaves some left-over, low-value trees for pulp or power. A mountain of wood chips will end up burning in a UK power station So is the environmentalist argument really against the power industry? Or against America’s laws on forest biodiversity? It depends, of course, on how much the power industry expands. But the best way of protecting the forests may be for benefactors to buy them, because those wedding dresses will still need to be paid for. The other big environmental issue is climate change. When the EU set its 2020 target of sourcing 20% of energy from renewables, some leaders thought the deal referred to electricity. (I know because I spoke to Downing Street on the day of the decision). In fact, it included energy for transport and heating too, so the bar was set much higher than anticipated. Policies create opportunities and entrepreneurs were quick to exploit the potential of wood power, which will soon create more renewable energy in the UK than wind and solar combined. Roger Harrabin visited Drax power station in December 2012 as it prepares to burn more wood and other biomass instead of coal But will this achieve the stated goal of cutting carbon emissions? The British government will shortly announce its rules for the sustainability of “biomass” burning for power. It will set a standard for emissions created from the cutting, drying and shipping and timber but it will make a working assumption that burning the wood has nil CO2 emissions as new trees will suck up the CO2 emitted by wood burning. Critics say this is simplistic as it fails to recognise that it will take maybe 50 years for new trees to absorb the CO2, whilst politicians agree that emissions need to be cut immediately to prevent carbon over-heating the planet. It also fails to account for the fact that in the US the forest stock has been increasing and this process offsets the growth in carbon emissions from homes and industry. Burning American trees in the UK reduces America’s “carbon sink”. Foresters argue that this doesn’t matter much as long as the total biomass sent for export is no greater than the wood used in a single large pulp mill. But these numbers will grow fast. Liberal Democrat MP Nick Harvey has tabled an amendment to the UK Energy Bill insisting that long-term subsidies for biomass burning should only be agreed for plants that capture and store CO2 emissions, or use the waste heat for other purposes. (Drax alone expects subsidies of more than £1bn in coming years from people’s electricity bills.) But the amendment is not supported by any of the major parties. It looks as though UK Government policy is being driven by the need to hit mandatory targets and keep electrons flowing, rather than by a deep desire to cut CO2 emissions right now. Continue reading

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New Report Claims UK Able To Achieve Zero Carbon With Renewable Energy

23 July 2013 The Center for Alternative Technology has released an update to its Zero Carbon Britain scenario, which shows that the UK can reduce carbon emissions with existing technology. The research shows that by making changes to our buildings, transport systems and behaviour, and by investing in a variety of renewable energy generation technologies suited to the UK (without a nuclear component), the UK can provide a reliable zero carbon energy supply without negatively impacting on quality of life. Smart demand management, plus the intelligent use of surplus electricity in combination with biomass to create carbon neutral synthetic gas and liquid fuels, means that that the UK can meet its entire energy demand without imports, and also provide for some transport and industrial processes that cannot run on electricity. In the scenario the biomass we require is provided by growing second generation energy crops on UK land. The UK’s cropland is still used for food production, and we produce the vast majority of the food required to provide for the UK population on home soil. The research suggests that by changing what we eat (mainly a significant reduction in meat and dairy products, coupled with increases in various other food sources) means we eat a more healthy and balanced diet than we do today while our agricultural system emits fewer greenhouse gases and uses less land both at home and abroad, thus decreasing the environmental impact of our food production globally. The scenario balances out some greenhouse gas emissions that cannot currently be eliminated from non-energy processes (industry, waste and agriculture) by using safe, sustainable and reliable methods of capturing carbon. The research showed that by restoring important habitats such as peatland, and by substantially expanding forested areas, we not only capture carbon but also provide wood products for buildings and infrastructure, rich environments for biodiversity and more natural spaces for all of us to enjoy. The research also highlights the need for further research on adaptation, economic transition and policy that would achieve sufficient greenhouse gas emissions reductions quickly and equitably. Continue reading

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Australian Carbon Tax To Go – What Lessons Can Be Learned?

By Phil Covington | July 23rd, 2013 There are three things governments can do in order to address carbon emissions. Firstly, they can do nothing, which is the position the U.S. Federal government has taken, since the U.S. Congress has no appetite for pricing carbon. Secondly, governments can create a carbon marketplace, such as the European Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), and California’s cap and trade program; providing an opportunity for businesses to make money from carbon allowances and for market forces to set the price. Or thirdly, they can impose a carbon tax; the choice the Australian government opted for, and which has been causing quite a bit of disquiet within the business community over there in recent months. Soon business leaders won’t have to worry. Australia’s new Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, a former PM who returned to power in June by virtue of a leadership change within the incumbent Labor Party, has announced the government will end what has become the unpopular carbon tax and instead, bring forward an emissions trading scheme a year earlier than planned. There are of course many pros and cons in the debate as to whether a carbon tax or an emissions trading scheme is the better way to control CO2 – and while the point of this piece is not to go into these, there is perhaps a lesson here for any countries out there trying to decide between them. Here is a very simplified perspective that may be drawn from Australia’s experience. Australia’s carbon tax at 23.09 (AUD) per tonne, was introduced to curb emissions from a country that is one of the world’s worst per-capita greenhouse gas emitters . The tax makes the biggest polluters pay, but that cost is passed on to small businesses and consumers by way of higher energy prices. This is why it has become so unpopular. By comparison, businesses and consumers in Europe, while also having to pay more to accommodate the price of carbon under their cap and trade system are, however, less burdened than Australians. Given that Europe’s price on carbon floats subject to market forces, in April the price per tonne of carbon effectively collapsed down to just 2.75 Euros – the equivalent, at the time of writing – of less than 4.00 Australian dollars per tonne. While this was generally considered to be way too low, EU countries were not prepared to prop up the price , largely because under their ongoing economic doldrums, there wasn’t much will to raise costs. Europe’s free falling carbon price even prompted The Economist to wonder if it might even spell the end of the ETS altogether. Under such circumstances, however, with Europe’s carbon price so low, Australia’s flat tax very easily became a competitive disadvantage for its businesses operating within the global economy. The disparity in price between Australia and Europe – with Australia paying almost six times as much per tonne of carbon as Europeans – makes it easy to see why even if a sensible carbon tax rate were originally set, it can start to look unfair when carbon markets elsewhere in the world set the price much lower. Furthermore, despite being designed as a disincentive for carbon emissions, carbon taxes still don’t impose a carbon cap, so their ability to mitigate carbon is still not certain. Australia’s Rudd suggests that moving to an emissions trading scheme – which will be linked to the European carbon market – will save households 349 Australian dollars a year. So despite a carbon tax being a simple way to price carbon, and despite Europe’s ETS being far from perfect, the lesson from Australia is that their carbon tax has proved to be unpalatable, uncompetitive and ultimately abandoned. Image by Quinn Dombrowski Continue reading

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