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Biomass Fuel Subsidies To Be Capped Says Energy Secretary

By Roger Harrabin Environment analyst, BBC News Burning wood is not a long term answer to the UK’s energy needs, says Energy Secretary Ed Davey The government is turning away from its controversial policy of subsidising UK power stations to generate electricity from burning wood. It is proposing that subsidies for bespoke biomass burning plants should be capped at 400 MW. It will end subsidies for biomass burning in existing stations by 2027. There was an outcry in May when the BBC revealed that millions of tonnes of wood were being shipped from the USA to help meet Britain’s renewables targets. Wood is classed a renewable fuel because trees soak up CO2. Burning wood is counted as carbon-neutral, even though it takes the lifetime of a new tree to reabsorb the carbon emitted when an existing tree is burned. Temporary solution Environmentalists are relieved, but say the policy should never have been approved in the first place. The UK’s biggest power station, Drax in Yorkshire, has been converting half its boilers from coal to wood. Most of this wood it burns is imported, particularly from the US. Ed Davey, the Energy Secretary, told the BBC that biomass was a temporary solution to meet climate change targets while renewable energy systems were being developed. “Making electricity from biomass based on imported wood is not a long-term answer to our energy needs – I am quite clear about that,” he said. Carbon conundrum There has been fierce controversy about the sustainability of powering British homes with American wood. Critics say that it takes 50 years or more for a new tree to absorb the CO2 released when an existing tree is burned. But calculations by the government’s chief energy scientist, David Mackay, on the carbon emissions from wood-burning are so controversial that they remain formally unpublished. In a statement to the BBC, the energy department, DECC, now acknowledges that burning biomass in dedicated power stations offers poor value carbon savings compared with wind power or even gas. It says it still aims to incentivise sustainable biomass burning for heat and Combined Heat and Power, which uses leftover heat to make electricity. A DECC spokesman said in the long term, it hoped to be able to burn biomass from sustainable sources, then capture the emissions using carbon capture and storage technology. This would actually remove CO2 from the atmosphere. There will be a debate, though, over what sustainable means. The UK’s largest power station, Drax, is converting some of boilers to burn wood The biomass policy was largely ignored in the media until it became clear that millions of tonnes of wood would be burned. At first, the firms involved said they were only burning waste from the timber industry, mainly in the US. An investigation by BBC News confirmed allegations by green groups that whole trees were sometimes being pelleted to be burned. But the timber companies said those trees were being cut anyway, either as part of tree-thinning operations, or as part of forest clearance by the small private landowners who dominate forestry in the south-eastern US. This presented a more complex picture, in which the key question was not whether whole trees were being burned, but whether biomass policies were diverting material from other uses, such as pulp and paper. The figures on this are unclear. ‘Serious threat’ Harry Huyton from the RSPB said environmentalists were pleased the government was stepping back from subsidies on biomass. “We have consistently raised our concerns around creating a large and unsustainable demand for wood for power generation in the UK because of the serious threat this poses to climate change and forest ecosystems,” he told the BBC. “We believe that the UK should focus on building a bioenergy sector that is based on domestic feedstocks, such as wastes and arisings from forestry and agriculture. “Recent signs that government support for large scale wood-fired power stations is cooling are welcome, but we need further action to ensure this sector develops without unacceptable impacts on our climate and wildlife.” The Renewable Energy Association, which promotes biomass, is dismayed at the government’s change in attitude. “It is madness for the government to have capped biomass burning at a time when we are in a capacity crunch for electricity,” said the group’s chief executive, Gaynor Hartnell. “Firms that have been working hard to develop capacity have been told that only a fraction will now be needed. “There’s been a big NGO [non-governmental organisation] backlash against biomass and we have to make sure it isn’t driven out altogether.” Biomass, like biofuel for transport, was an apparent solution seized in haste after EU leaders in 2007 agreed that renewables would supply 20% of all energy by 2020 . The UK delegation did not realise this included oil and gas, as well as electricity, and inadvertently signed up for a near-impossible target of 15% renewables. Entrepreneurs stepped in to fill the gap and biomass will supply a large portion of the EU’s target. The government’s former climate change ambassador, John Ashton, told me: “The biomass policy appeared with trace. I can’t remember a single strategic discussion over how it would be deployed. It’s no way to run a long-term carbon reduction strategy.” Continue reading

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Bella Bellissima’s Latest Fragrances Launched

The latest three fragrances in the Bella Bellissima Essense of Oud Collection have been launched in Selfridge’s Exchange Square and Trafford Centre stores. The pure parfums are inspired by the love and adventure of ancient Arabia. At the heart of every Essence of Oud scent lies the seductive note of pure agarwood oil. Each fragrance is complex and compelling, including a distinctive aphrodisiac blended with rich Eastern essences, delicate florals, exotic resins, cherished woods and rare spices to create long-lasting intense perfumes that celebrate the power of Oud. Exclusive to Selfridges, Bella Bellissima’s Oud fragrances are now available in stores nationwide. BELLA BELLISSIMA RUBY OUD PARFUM 50ML £158, BELLA BELLISSIMA BLUE DIAMOND OUD PARFUM 50ML £168, BELLA BELLISSIMA EMERALD OUD PARFUM 50ML £158 Continue reading

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Preparing For A Pellet Tide

By Tim Portz | July 16, 2013 UNLOADING THE WARNOW MARS: Grab-by-grab, 26,003 tons of North American wood pellets were unloaded in early May at the Port of Tyne, which was among the first ports to invest in pellet infrastructure and is currently the market leader amongst British PHOTO: TIM PORTZ While moored at the Port of Brunswick in late June, Dutch cargo vessel Koningsborg filled its cargo holds with nearly 7,500 tons of wood pellets and prepared for a 10-day trip to England. Once full, the vessel slipped quietly under the Sidney Lanier Bridge, and set an azimuth to take the vessel around the southern coast of the island nation and up its eastern shore, to a waiting port complex built upon the Humber Estuary. The estuary is among the busiest port complexes in all of Europe, positioned near robust road and rail infrastructure and within a 4-hour drive of 40 million people and over 60 percent of the nation’s manufacturing capacity. Nearly 25 percent of all of the United Kingdom’s seaborne trade passes through one of the estuary’s ports, and the bulk of energy products that move in and out the ports of Hull, Grimsby, Immingham and Goole illustrate the story of the incredible energy transformation underway in the U.K. Once a vital component of the U.K.’s coal export business, the ports have adjusted as the nation’s coal exports continue a steady decline that began just before World War I.  As the U.K. embarks on its ambitious plan to halve its greenhouse gas emissions—from its 1990 levels—by 2025, its ports are once again evolving to support the country’s energy strategy. Responding to a policy environment that has simultaneously placed a price on carbon and incentivized the production of renewable energy, the first wave of the U.K.’s largest coal-fired power producers have begun their conversions from carbon-dense coal to wood pellets. The largest of these converters, also one of the largest coal-fired power plants in all of Europe, is a 3,960-MW power station in Drax, owned and operated by the Drax Group. This massive facility, responsible for the production of nearly 7 percent of all the electricity produced in the U.K., was at one time the largest single-site consumer of coal in the kingdom. Already, the power station has converted one of an eventual three boilers to burn wood pellets. This conversion project, initially planned to be fully complete in 2016, is ahead of schedule and will consume nearly 7 million tons of pellets per year. Nearly all of these pellets will be sourced from foreign suppliers, arriving in the U.K.  at a handful of ports with rail lines connecting them to Drax. In the late 2000s, long before construction crews began work to convert Drax’s first boiler to wood pellets, the Drax Group began readying its infrastructure partners to handle the massive quantities of woody biomass pellets, a feedstock the ports were largely unfamiliar with. In November 2009, the Port of Tyne and the Drax Group signed an agreement that would guarantee the Port of Tyne shipments of up to 1.4 million tons of wood pellets per year. This agreement provided the surety the port needed to transform itself into a facility capable of handling this new feedstock. Commenting on the agreement at the time of its signing, Port of Tyne CEO Andrew Moffatt noted, “There is some fairly extensive work to be done to accommodate the specific requirements of this project, and we are investing over £16 million ($23.8 million) to ensure everything will be ready in time for the Port to be able to handle the new biomass cargo.” Since the signing of the agreement, the Port of Tyne has made investments in offloading infrastructure, a 70,000-metric ton covered storage facility, a rail car loading silo, and two state-of-the-art mobile pellet hoppers, which effectively eliminate the fugitive dust created when pellet vessels are unloaded. The investments now exceed £20 million, and Moffat considers his facility a leader in the space, saying, “By increasing our throughput capacity and investing in the infrastructure to meet the growing demand from the power industry, the Port of Tyne is now one of the first ports in Europe to be handling the import of wood pellets on this scale.” Immingham/Grimsby Assuming pellets arrive at England’s ports predominantly in vessels capable of carrying between 15,000 and 25,000 tons, Drax’s demand alone will result in the berthing and offloading of anywhere between 280 and 465 vessels per year. With other power facilities having already converted to wood pellets or contemplating doing so, neither Drax nor the country’s other producers can risk having only one port capable of handling wood pellets. To guarantee an uninterrupted stream of pellets, pellet infrastructure would have to be built at more than one port. The Humber estuary and its complex of ports, owned and operated by the Associated British Ports, lies just over 120 nautical miles south of Port of Tyne, both of which enjoy direct rail access to the Drax Power Station. In April, the Port of Immingham, already the U.K.’s largest handler of dry bulk cargo, announced it had contracted with Graham Construction to design and construct the Immingham Renewable Fuels Terminal. The facility will consist of over 1 kilometer of covered conveyors, four storage silos able to hold nearly 100,000 tons of pellets, road and rail load-out facilities and extensive safety systems that will establish the port as a major player in the U.K.’s pellet supply chain, boasting abilities to handle more than 3 million tons of pellets each year. Putting the investment in context of the port’s energy history, John Fitzgerald, ABP port director at Grimsby & Immingham said, “Immingham has always been an energy port ever since it opened just over 100 years ago, so it is fitting that the U.K.’s largest, most technically advanced biomass handling terminal will be built here.” Just north across the Humber estuary lies the port of Hull, also owned and operated by the ABP. In late April, the residents of Kingston-Upon-Hull witnessed a concrete silo rise from the port, one of the most visible components of the new pellet handling facilities. When complete, it will bring Hull’s annual pellet capacity to 1 million tons. The silo is just one aspect of the state-of-the-art pellet handling systems being constructed by Hull’s own Spencer Group.  When finished, the silo will facilitate the loading and unloading of rail wagons in a continuous and uninterrupted loading methodology. Using an innovative array of magnets and pneumatic switches, specially designed rail wagons will open, accept a full load of pellets, and close without any spillage. Once operational, this facility will be able to load a 30-wagon trainload of cars with 1,500 tons of wood pellets in just 45 minutes. Together, the ports at Immingham and Hull are poised to make the most of the opportunity presented by the U.K.’s increasing appetite for wood pellets. Explaining how each port brings important characteristics to the opportunity, Mike Sellers, deputy port manager at Hull says, “The Humber is an ideal location for imports of biomass ,given the close proximity to the power stations. Immingham can serve deeper draughted vessels at the Humber International Terminal, and Hull has significant spare rail capacity. This makes the Humber ports an attractive proposition.” Within the first days of July, the Koningsborg completed its journey to Hull and offloaded its load of pellets. Now able to handle shipments of pellets, the Koningsborg was unloaded by conventional dry-bulk unloading systems in the shadows of equipment being used in a race to finish the pellet terminal there. Like its counterparts in the region, the Port of Hull knows that the Koningsborg and vessels like it will soon return, laden with a feedstock that figures largely in the U.K.’s aggressive low-carbon energy strategy. If the U.K.’s pellet play is to deliver the results policymakers hope it will, England’s ports must be ready. Author: Tim Portz Executive Editor, Pellet Mill Magazine 651-398-9154 tportz@bbiinternational.com Continue reading

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