Monday, March 26, 2012

G BROWN NEWSLETTER MARCH 2012


B BROWN NEWSLETTER


Gerald W brown * 7202 County Road U * Danbury, WI 54830
Phone
715-866-8535
Gerald Brown is solely responsible for the content in this newsletter








SAVING THE PLANET, ONE PELLET AT A TIME

• CHINA’S STRONG HOUSING STARTS 2012–15

• POPULAR WOODSTOVE EXCHANGE PROGRAM BEING OFFERED AGAIN

• SIX SCHOOLS COULD GET WOOD BURNING BOILERS

• FOREST SERVICE CHIEF FIELDS BUDGET QUESTIONS

• BIO SUPPORTS PROPOSED BIOBASED LEGISLATION

• PELLET BOILERS NOW CLASSIFIED AS CONVENTIONAL HEATING SOURCE

• WRANGELL EXPLORES LOCAL BIOFUEL PRODUCTION

• UNITS FIGHT BLAZE AT NC WOOD PELLET PLANT
• THE BEAUTY OF BIOMASS


• HOW MONKS WITH GREEN HABITS SLASHED THEIR HEATING BILLS

• REGION 9 SCHOOL TO EXPLORE ALTERNATIVE FUELS

• REBATES HELP CITIZENS INSTALL WOOD PELLET BOILERS

• WRANGELL EXPLORES LOCAL BIOFUEL PRODUCTION

• SAVANNAH RIVER SITE STARTS UP OPERATION
• FAQ ON ARMY'S $7 BILLION DRAFT RFP FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY
• SELMA BIOMASS PLANT TO START IN 2013

• MAINE FOREST SERVICE CUTS RIBBON AT TWO PELLET BOILER PROJECTS

• PORT OF WILMINGTON SEES EXPORTS RISE; DIRECTION REMAINS MURKY

• BIOMASS POWER COMPANY EXPANDING INTO U.S. MARKET

• DRY BIOMASS MAKES A DIFFERENCE

• INDUSTRY EXPERTS DISCUSS PERFECT STORM OF WOOD PELLET GROWTH













SAVING THE PLANET, ONE PELLET AT A TIME

The U.S. Army issued the following news release:
Baumholder energy initiatives are saving the planet, one wood pellet at a time. The U.S. Army Garrison Baumholder is moving forward with initiatives to save energy and help create an environmentally friendly community. The latest effort has been to install new furnaces that produce heat by burning wood pellets, which is 30 to 40 percent more economical than using heating oil.
Baumholder currently has about 50 buildings that are not connected to the steam heating system, mostly due to their remote locations. These buildings are currently heated with oil burning furnaces.
To help reduce heating requirements, six wood pellet burning furnaces will replace the aging heating oil furnaces. Three of the new furnaces are already functional and on line. Three more will soon be operational. When the project is complete, the six new furnaces will relieve seven buildings of their heating oil dependency.
Additional funding has been allocated to provide Baumholder with two more wood pellet furnaces that will heat an additional three buildings.
Converting to wood pellet burning furnaces is in line with Installation Management Command's Line of Effort 6.0 Energy and Water Efficiency and Security. Its critical measures deal with energy reduction, water usage reduction, using renewable energy and waste recycling. It's also the culmination of long planning coming from the Garrison's Zero Footprint planning concept that means energy independence with renewable, self-produced, local energy sources.
The new furnaces have a four-fold effect on the overall energy conservation scheme, according to Sean Lambur, Plans, Analysis and Integration Office director for USAG Baumholder. "The furnaces help create environmental and financial sustainability for Baumholder. We say that wood pellets are environmentally neutral because the same amount of carbon dioxide is released burning as otherwise rotting in forests. Depending on the particular furnace size and location, the renewable wood pellets that we'll need will cost us 30 to 40 percent less than heating oil. That could be more than $30,000 in just one year already and, with only 10 of 50 buildings done, you can see there's lots more to be saved. Local wood pellet supplies give the garrison energy independence compared to imported heating oil," said Lambur.
Weaning the garrison off its heating oil dependency is an unprecedented and ambitious endeavor, but it is not the only thing Baumholder is doing to step up its energy saving program. The implementation of wood pellet burning furnaces represents just the tip of the iceberg in Baumholder's overall energy plan.
Baumholder has also received $3.4 million to install radiant heating in 11 motor pools that replaces old hot air blowers. "This initiative will save Baumholder more than $600,000 annually in energy costs," said Lambur.
The use of renewable energy has become more and more prevalent in Europe. Solar panels cover Germany's red rooftops and energy windmills dot the landscape. Some communities have converted much of their open land to "solar farms" and "wind farms" which feed the electrical energy they produce directly into Germany's national energy net.
Baumholder has seen the wisdom and installed 530 solar panels on three prominent buildings. "We plan to install more panels and direct the electricity into the German net and thereby reduce our electrical costs with those rebates," said Lambur.
Looking outside the garrison's borders, Baumholder is moving to establish a partnership between Energy of Idar-Oberstein and the state of Rheinland Pfalz.
OIE is the private heating supplier for the region. "OIE is seeking to build an additional heating plant which burns wood chips that could supply more than 80 percent of the garrison's heating requirement with renewable energy," said Lambur.
In the recycling arena, Baumholder's new trash collection contract is earning money off of metal, glass and paper. That, together with Baumholder's new recycling program, is why all the recycling islands in the housing areas have bins for trash, paper, glass and cans. USAG Baumholder leads all garrisons in Europe in recycling earnings, with more than $100,000 in fiscal year 2011.
Baumholder is also taking the initiative to educate the community about recycling. The Go Green recycling program was introduced to the workforce and the community at personnel assemblies and town hall meetings. The garrison's goal is to reach a 42 percent recycling rate. In 2011, the garrison improved from 28.5 to 32 percent in just six months, mostly due to better glass separation in the new islands throughout the housing areas. The program is also being expanded in the home as the garrison hopes to purchase recycling bin sets for all family quarters this year. Many larger recycling bin sets, known by their bright blue (paper), yellow (cans) and red (glass) colors, have been distributed to public areas where Soldiers and civilians work.
Baumholder's energy efficiency and recycling plans are closely related. Recycled materials are also cheaper to dispose of, said Lambur. Going Green, whether in energy or in trash "our goal is to cut costs wherever possible and Go Green at the same time with self-sufficiency wherever possible," said Lambur.
Taking a look at the overall picture, "USAG Baumholder enjoys unique opportunities for energy and recycling management as we operate all heating, electrical and trash systems with our in-house workforce. This control gives us operational flexibility to pursue significant improvements in many areas," said Lambur.
By Ignacio Rubalcava (USAG Baumholder)

CHINA’S STRONG HOUSING STARTS 2012–15
WOOD MARKETS • Image by Zhiqian Li
The Chinese government is attempting to orchestrate a housing-market situation in 2012 that is unheard of in the Western world: a reduction in house prices to balance out excess housing stocks in the short-term, in combination with a massive expansion of the number of “affordable” housing starts (mainly through government-financed low-cost housing) to accommodate a long-term plan to meet rapid urban population growth.
The key objective of the Chinese government’s five-year plan is to make new housing units (mainly apartments) more affordable for the average Chinese family, by increasing construction of government financed/subsidized (“affordable”) homes throughout China, while at the same time implementing new policies to reduce prices on the excessive inventories of new and existing homes
The new housing policy directives, implemented gradually during 2010 and 2011, began to have a noticeable impact in the third and fourth quarters of 2011. The question on the minds of major log and lumber exporters to China is whether a command economy like China’s can achieve what a free-market economy cannot even contemplate. With continued sluggish housing starts and soft lumber markets forecast for the U.S., and fragile lumber markets expected for Europe in 2012, any change in Chinese demand is bound to have a major impact on global log and lumber prices.


POPULAR WOODSTOVE EXCHANGE PROGRAM BEING OFFERED AGAIN


Courier-Islander February 29, 2012


Back by popular demand, Campbell River's Wood Stove Exchange Program encourages residents to upgrade older wood stoves to CSA/EPA-certified wood, pellet or gas heating appliances, with 40 rebates available from March 1 through April 30, 2012.
A total of 75 exchanges have occurred since the program began in 2009 with $250-rebates available on a first come, first served basis. The continuation of this program in 2012 is made possible through $15,000 in grant funding secured from the BC Lung Association.
"As the burning season starts to wind down, this is a good time to consider switching out old uncertified smoky appliances with a high-efficiency wood, pellet or gas heating appliance," says Councillor Larry Samson, liaison to the City's Environmental Advisory Committee. "In addition to City rebates, savings offered by participating retailers and manufacturers make upgrading a wood stove a cost-effective and an environmentally sound decision."
A summary of air quality surveys conducted in 2010 and 2011 will be available for the public in an upcoming report as part of this year's program.
"While we are pleased to see that levels of fine particulate matter are generally very low, the preliminary results also confirm that there are a number of low-lying areas within the City that are 'hot spots' for wood smoke pollution," says Ron Neufeld, the City's general manager of operations.
The Vancouver Island Health Authority (VIHA) recognizes that fine particulate air pollution generated by older wood stoves contributes to many types of respiratory symptoms, respiratory illnesses, and decreased lung function. From a public health perspective, fine particulates are considered to have the most impact of outdoor air pollutants. With the woodstoves exchanged through the program to date, an estimated 4,650 kg of fine particulate air pollution has been reduced each season based on provincial criteria helping us all to breathe a little easier.
"Wood burning is at the heart of the Canadian identity," says Peter Woods, Chair of the City's Environmental Advisory Committee. "By exchanging old wood stoves for certified appliances, residents of Campbell River can continue this longstanding tradition, while also reducing pollution levels not just in the community, but in the greater air shed as well."
Burn It Smart, wood pile pride education and outreach events will take place throughout the Wood Stove Exchange Program. Program details will be available soon and will be posted on the City's website and in local newspapers.
The Wood Stove Exchange Program is administered by the City of Campbell River in partnership with local retailers, the BC Lung Association, the Province of BC and the Hearth, Patio and Barbecue Association of Canada. Participating retailers include Bennett Sheet Metal & Heating, Just Wood Stoves, Quality Stoves and Fireplaces Ltd and Guardian Chimney Services. Information on the Wood Stove Exchange Program and wood heating is available on the City website (www.campbellriver.ca).
For information contact Amanda Taylor at the City of Campbell River at 250-286-5721 or by email at amanda.taylor@campbellriver.ca.
SIX SCHOOLS COULD GET WOOD BURNING BOILERS

Published on Wednesday 7 March 2012 08:52
WOOD burning boilers might be installed in six Calderdale primary schools.
They are likely to cost £500,000 but are expected to earn the council more than £1.3 million by reducing carbon emissions.
The boilers are earmarked for St Mary’s Catholic Primary and Beech Hill, Halifax, Old Earth, Elland, West Vale, Ash Green, at Mixenden and St Chad’s, in Brighouse.
Installing environmentally friendly boilers would make it possible for Calderdale Council to take advantage of the Government’s new Renewable Heat Incentive Scheme, which encourages organisations to generate heat from renewable sources
Council leaders will consider the proposal when they meet on Monday.
The new boilers would burn recycled wood pellets and under the scheme, the council could expect payments for every unit of heat generated.
The renewables tariff is guaranteed for 20 years and the installation costs could be recouped within seven years. At that point, the additional payments could be shared between the council and the schools.
It is estimated that the new boilers could reduce carbon dioxide emissions by up to 400 tonnes a year.
Calderdale Council’s energy project officer, Dan Knight, said: “This is the sort of partnership approach that the council is trying to develop.
“The council and the schools will be saving money in the long term while demonstrating their commitment to the environment. A number of innovative environmental projects that we are involved in with partner organisations across a range of activities.”
The boilers at Old Earth and West Vale schools currently run on gas and the other four on heating oil.
Each school has two boilers and the proposal is to replace just one to provide the main source of heating.

FOREST SERVICE CHIEF FIELDS BUDGET QUESTIONS
Posted on March 7, 2012 by Bob Berwyn

U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell.
Bark beetles, climate change and firefighting among the key concerns in U.S. Senate hearing
By Bob Berwyn
SUMMIT COUNTY — Intertwined concerns about overall forest health, bark beetles, climate change and wildfires took center state Tuesday at a full hearing of the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, as lawmakers from both sides of the aisle questioned Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell about his agency’s ability to meet its obligations to address the multiple challenges.
U.S. Senator Mark Udall, a Colorado Democrat, said its critical to engage the private sector and encourage the use of beetle kill products by expanding markets for forest products. That requires streamlining contracting procedures and giving incentives to companies that use beetle-killed wood for construction, as well as wood pellets and biomass for energy production.
“The private sector is key to dealing with this epidemic,” Udall said. “In a state like Colorado, where there is a large need for forest treatments but few forest-management businesses, the Forest Service should tailor timber sales and stewardship contracts to fit this industry, and work to try to move at the pace of industry as much as possible,” Udall said after the hearing. See a video of the exchange at Udall’s website.
Sen. Al Franken, a Democrat from Minnesota, used the hearing to emphasize concerns about how climate change may affect long-term forest health. He aksed Tidwell whether global warming leads to more fires, and more bark beetles surviving through the winter — and took a shot at some of his Republican colleagues who have expressed doubt about the state of climate science.
“There is a climate change denial among some of my colleagues that I find very disturbing,” Franken said.
“When it comes to fire, definitely, yes, we’re seeing much long fire seasons … as much as 60 -70 days longer, and more severe fire behavior, partly due to extended droughts,” Tidwell replied.
In general, climate change is increasing the frequency of disturbance and severe weather events that affect forests. Tidwell said the current widespread bark beetle infestation (which is waning in Colorado) is one of the best examples of climate change impacts.
The beetles are surviving at higher elevations and the infestations are continuing for longer time periods due at least in part to milder winters, Tidwell said.
South Dakota Sen. Tim Johnson asked Tidwell what his state can expect in the agency’s budget to deal with the growing pine beetle infestation in the Black Hills.
“There’s no way there will ever be enough appropriated funding to do the restoration that’s needed,” Tidwell said. “We need the forest products industry to remove the biomass.”
Other pressing needs exist in New Hampshire, where Sen. Jeanne Shaheen said that Hurricane Irene did $10 million worth of damage across 800,000 acres of national forest that sees 6 millio visitors per year.
“We do expect to be able to send some additional funding … it won’t be everything that they need,” Tidwell said.
He also answered questions about firefighting resources in what could be a long, hot summer in the central part of the country, saying the agency is short eight air tankers, but is looking to contract with private companies to ensure that there are adequate resources.
Additionally, the Forest Service will rely on partnering with the Air National Guard and using large helicopters for aerial firefighting efforts.

BIO SUPPORTS PROPOSED BIOBASED LEGISLATION
Written by BIO

Mar. 5, 2012, Washington, DC - Programs that help build a biobased economy can generate jobs and economic growth in the United States. The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) today thanked Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and co-sponsors Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Tom Carper (D-Del.), Robert Casey (D-Penn.), Chris Coons (D-Del.), Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), and Jon Tester (D-Mont.) for introducing legislation that would allow more bio-manufacturing companies to participate in Farm Bill programs.

BIO President & CEO Jim Greenwood said, “Senator Stabenow’s proposed legislation would help bio-based manufacturers access vital capital, strengthen market opportunities for biobased products, and spur commercialization of agricultural and industrial biotech innovations. Technology neutral support for all biobased products, renewable chemicals, and biofuels will help build a robust biobased economy.

“Building a biobased economy in the United States will generate good jobs in manufacturing, agricultural production and forestry, transportation and distribution, and construction. Biomanufacturing opportunities can help revitalize traditional manufacturing regions and rural areas, creating a healthy, sustainable biobased economy. The biobased product and renewable chemical industry in 2008 employed 50,000 people in the United States, and more recent data indicates a near doubling of jobs. Continued growth of the industry and rebuilding the U.S. chemical production market can generate tens of thousands more jobs in the near future.”

BIO’s report, “Biobased Chemicals and Products: A New Driver for Green Jobs,” documents the potential for job creation through biomanufacturing and is available on the BIO.org website. According to the report, while the traditional U.S. chemicals and plastics industry has been a driver of export earnings for the United States, between 1997 and 2003 the U.S balance of trade in chemicals dropped from a $20 billion surplus to a $10 billion deficit. The United States regained some ground, but maintains an overall deficit. It has been estimated that the global sustainable chemical industry will grow to $1 trillion dollars in the next 10 years, which creates a significant opportunity for job growth and export growth. If U.S. companies can capture 19 percent of this new $1 trillion market, the report projects that the U.S. will create about 237,000 direct U.S. jobs in the sustainable chemicals sector, while shifting the balance of trade in the chemical sector to a surplus.


PELLET BOILERS NOW CLASSIFIED AS CONVENTIONAL HEATING SOURCE
By Anna Austin | March 06, 2012




Wood pellet boilers are now classified as a conventional, primary heating source, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and consequently will now qualify for Federal Housing Authority Funding. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shawn Donovan announced the news March 1.
The announcement came after a request from Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, for HUD to take another look at the issue, because families in Maine are facing major financial burdens from high oil prices and cut backs in fuel assistance programs. “Maine is the most heavily dependent of any state in the nation on home heating oil, and when you see the spikes in oil prices that we’ve seen this year, and the cut backs in the low income heating assistance program, it is causing tremendous hardship for so many of our families in Maine,” she said. “It’s also very difficult because Maine has the oldest housing stock in the nation, and thus, there are a lot of homes that are poorly insulated and would benefit from weatherization projects, and that’s something we ought to invest more in, as well.”
Sen. Collins also pointed out that large swings in oil prices have causes many residents to look to alternatives, and the wood pellet boiler industry is growing rapidly in the state as a result. “[Wood pellet boilers] have the potential to help out these families to convert from oil, and also to create thousands of new jobs in our state,” she said. “Wood pellet manufacturing, boiler technology and pellet delivery systems have progressed dramatically since the days when you had to scoop pellets from small bags into a small stove every couple of hours. Now, the industry has developed boilers that don’t require any human intervention during the day. There are automatic feeds for the pellets.”
She added that HUD has been slow to consider wood pellet boilers as an acceptable primary heating source, and if they were to do so, it would help families in Maine have confidence in converting to wood without losing their eligibility for FHA funding and federal housing programs.
Donovan responded by admitting that government agencies are often behind the cutting edge in terms of new technology, and announced that HUD is in the process of updating its handbooks to reflect that decision. He said the organization has notified all of its lenders that wood pellet stoves are an acceptable heating system for homes under HUD’s insurance programs, as long as they meet the qualifications that any heating system has to make.



WRANGELL EXPLORES LOCAL BIOFUEL PRODUCTION
Charlotte Duren


Image by Charlotte Duren
Johnson unloads wood pellets
WRANGELL, ALASKA (2012-03-07) Wrangell is taking a close look at its future energy needs. The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) held a meeting in Wrangell recently to discuss the issue and the role biofuels are playing in many Alaska communities. KSTK’s Charlotte Duren has more on some of the Southeast projects, as well as what some Wrangell residents are already doing.

As heating oil costs continue to rise, many Alaskans are looking for cheaper alternatives to meet their energy needs. One method is converting plants, paper, or wood waste into biomass to use as a renewable energy source.

“Probably about 5-years ago the fuel prices got extremely high for a period of time and I was burning about 12-hundred gallons of oil a year in my house and I knew I needed to do something different,” he says.

That’s Wrangell resident Carl Johnson. Johnson has been heating his two-story home with wood pellets for 5-years. He says it cut his heating costs dramatically.

“I went from about $4,500 a year in oil to about $1,200 in pellets. I spend about half in wood pellets than I would in oil,” he says.

He buys in bulk from a manufacturer in the Lower-48, as well as from a retailer in town. He says heating could cost even less if he could buy from a local manufacturer.  At a recent meeting, SEACC Organizer Jeremy Maxand proposed just that.   

“What we want to do is take a look at what the potential market penetration is for biofuels and look at the feasibility of building a manufacturing plant in Wrangell,” he says.

According to Southeast’s draft Integrated Resource Plan (IRP), a long-term generation and transmission study; there’s been a 50 percent increase in load on the hydropower system over the past 5-years. The IRP recommends the use of biofuels in homes and government buildings to help cut down on the load, as well as heating oil costs.

SEACC recently conducted a survey of residents in Wrangell and Petersburg to find out what types of energy people are using to heat their homes. It also asked whether people would be interested in using locally manufactured biofuel. Maxand, who is also Wrangell’s mayor, says 233 surveys were completed between the two communities.

“What we found in Wrangell and Petersburg, particularly in Wrangell is that 38% of respondents would be willing to purchase or use a locally manufactured product. And that is really important to know before you get too far down the road, to be able to know what the level of interest is,” he says.

Throughout Southeast Alaska, a number of successful biomass boiler projects have been developed. Sealaska Corporation’s Juneau headquarters has switched from oil to wood pellet heat. Craig and Thorne Bay heat school with waste-wood boilers.

Wrangell is considering manufacturing wood and paper briquettes that can be used in home wood stoves. Unlike pellet stoves, briquettes or “bio bricks” can be used just like regular firewood. Maxand says ultimately the conversion to biomass comes down to the needs of each individual community.

“We need to realize we are in a perfect storm right now between the Integrated Resource Plan, state funding, grant opportunities, small mills, municipal solid waste problem, you bring all these things together and you basically end up with an opportunity that can at least solve the heat side of the energy issue in Wrangell,” he says.

Last year Allen Brackley a Research Forest Supervisor for Sitka’s Wood Utilization Center visited Wrangell to speak on the town’s future forest product industry. One potential he says is the conversion of Wrangell’s small mill wood waste.

“There are a lot of renewable energy options, and I think in the short term the most viable biomass renewable energy options are some form of wood, then there’s wind power and solar power and all of those are making gain,” he says.

Brackley estimates it would take 23,000 cords of wood to replace all of the fuel oil used in homes and commercial buildings in Wrangell and Petersburg. This he says is 100% market penetration, which he believes won’t happen.  He estimates that a reasonable rate of penetration over the next 10 years might be 1/3 of the market.

The local tribal government recently sent a letter of interest to Anchorage-based Alaska Village Initiatives requesting assistance in performing a feasibility study for biofuel manufacturing in Wrangell. Later this month Wrangell’s Borough Assembly will vote on a briquette pilot project that could potentially decrease the high costs of municipal waste disposal. If approved it will be passed on to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).



UNITS FIGHT BLAZE AT NC WOOD PELLET PLANT
Posted: Mar 08, 2012 9:22 AM CST Updated: Mar 08, 2012 6:17 PM CST


Nature's Earth plant (Source: WMBF News Reporter Crystal Moyer)
LAURINBURG, NC (WMBF) Just hours after firefighters put out a blaze at a wood fuel pellet plant in Laurinburg, it rekindled. But the aftermath may cause more problems for the plant.
PLANT FIRE
SLIDESHOW

Plant fire photos
Firefighters in Laurinburg are battling a blaze at a plant that creates pellets for horse bedding Thursday morning with the assistance of Laurinburg Police and the American Red Cross.
According to Melanie Laviner with the Laurinburg Fire Department, the fire began around 8:40 a.m. at the Nature's Earth Plant located at 16900 Aberdeen Rd.
The plant manager says Thursday morning, employees at the plant noticed smoke coming from the storage units, or silos.
"I knew there was a fire in place or something that wasn't right, and my immediate response was to call the fire department and evacuate the building," said plant manager Trent Locklear.
Laurinburg Fire Chief John Evans adds that the fire was located in a silos of the plant, and was contained within two hours. Seven engines, three tankers, rescue and EMS were on scene fighting the blaze.
Laviner said there were no employees at the plant at the time of the fire and no injuries have been reported.
Chief Evans said firefighters were sent to the top of the silo to pour water down onto the fire, expecting it to exit through the bottom doors, but the product soaked the water, filling the silo up.
"This sawdust that's inside the silo is like a sponge, all the water that we're pouring into it is absorbing and we just want to make sure the silos will be able to hold the pressure that's being up against it," said Evans.
The plant produces wood fuel pellets used for horse bedding, kitty litter and biofuel.
They're stored in large silo units before they are transported.
The unit that caught fire was about 71-percent filled with the product when a blaze took over inside the silo.
"Arriving units pulled up and saw heavy smoke coming out of one of the silos, as units were setting up, we had an explosion," said Evans.
The fire chief says the explosion caused the fire to spread to the converter unit, that transports the product in and out of the silo.
Firefighters climbed to the top of the container to battle the flames after the explosions.
Officials say the situation may have been worse without the explosion-proof doors built into the silos, where the fire was burning.
"It would have been a major catastrophe if they didn't have the explosion-proof doors it would have built up enough pressure that the whole silo would have exploded," said Evans.
All of the employees got out unharmed, but the plant manager says they will have to get rid of all the product exposed to the fire and water.
"We have to do what we have to do, to continue to do," said Locklear.
The investigation into how the fire started is still ongoing.
The engineer who constructed the silo is working with the plant manager to see if the structure will be able to hold the mixture and figure out a safe way to get the product out of the silo.


THE BEAUTY OF BIOMASS
08 Mar 2012

Wood pellets need dry storage and lots of it
Green and virtuous, biomass offers some handling challenges, as Felicity Landon finds out
As power generators look to biomass as a vital ‘green’ ingredient, for co-firing with coal or firing on its own, many ports see potential big business on the horizon.
Logically, ports that have traditionally been part of the supply chain serving coal-fired power stations would be expected to take up the opportunities. But therein lies a problem, or several problems – including dust, risk of fire and/or explosion, and the need for significant areas of covered storage and specialised handling systems.
“It isn’t just a matter of using the same assumptions as when handling coal, and just using the same equipment and processes for biomass,” says Yannick Tilley, international sales and business development manager at the Geldof Metaalconstructie, the Belgian supplier of components and solutions for storage and handling of bulks.
“Biomass is a material that requires particularly careful attention. There are numerous examples out there of people not treating biomass, and especially wood pellets, with the necessary safety precautions in mind – and they can find themselves facing explosion or fire. And even if you have the most far advanced handling system on the quay, it is still important to check the material coming in. We have heard stories of ships coming in with the biomass already smouldering.”
Too many people mistakenly assume that biomass is ‘just another bulk’ and that somehow it will seamlessly follow coal from quay to power station, says Mr Tilley.
However, the differences are significant. When handling coal, dust problems can be resolved by using water sprinklers. Wood pellets, when handled, create a lot of dust – and there is already a certain percentage of dust within the material, which can potentially cause an explosion. But wood pellets must be kept dry, because if moisture levels get too high, they can disintegrate or the moisture will speed up the biological activity within the pellets which could lead to combustion.
“That has an impact, because the belt and transport systems must be covered – and that affects the design and price of the system.”
Another key factor is quantity.
“People forget that wood pellets are a lighter, more voluminous product,” says Robert van Muiden, general manager of Van Uden Bulk Logistics in Rotterdam.
“In the same ship, you might carry 50,000 tonnes of coal – but only 30,000 tonnes of wood pellets. In the same warehouse, where you normally might fit 10,000 tonnes of coal, maybe you will fit 6-7,000 tonnes of wood pellets.
“All the terminals are saying millions of tonnes of wood pellets are coming. There were 1.2m tonnes through Rotterdam last year – which sounds impressive, but is a flea bite compared with coal.”
And then there is the comparative calorific value; the calculations show that for every tonne of wood pellets versus coal, the biomass option is twice as expensive and offers half the caloric value, points out one industry expert.
In the rush to be green, he says, politicians have focused on subsidies for power stations but no one has thought about the investments required in ports or trains. Coal wagons are open; wood pellets must be carried in enclosed wagons.
Robert van Muiden says: “A supply chain includes all the costs from origin to end user. People should be aware that logistics costs can kill a project, or make it.”
Wood pellets are a clean, renewable, carbon-neutral biomass fuel, says Andrew Moffat, chief executive of the Port of Tyne.
The Tyne has led the way in the handling of wood pellets, with throughput last year of nearly 1m tonnes. This was all for the Drax power station, served by rail from the quay; the port is also in talks with other generators about potential biomass imports.
“It’s important to recognise that handling biomass isn’t like handling coal just because it is going down the same supply chain to the same end user,” says Mr Moffat. “Wood pellets are basically softwood sawdust compressed using steam. I would say there are a lot of similarities with grain. For example, there is a high moisture content – the cargo can heat up and combust, if left alone, and that is one of the challenges.”
And while combustion in coal can be dealt with by raking out the stack outside and using water sprinklers, clearly that’s not an option for pellets. They would disintegrate and become unusable. Stock rotation is important: “You have to make sure you are moving stock around and aerating it, so you don’t get heat spots and potential combustion.
“Another issue is dust. When you handle the wood pellets, you get degradation of quality, leading to further dust.”
The Port of Tyne describes its first year of handling wood pellets as “both challenging and fruitful”. It invested an initial £20m in a dredging project and the construction of a biomass handling, storage and transportation facility which it believes is the most advanced of its kind in Europe, added another £1m to make some short-term modifications, and in January this year installed two new specialist hoppers, total cost £2.2m. These are equipped with extractor fans to remove dust and return it to the cargo.
The wood pellets are unloaded on the quayside using traditional grabs, operating behind a forced air curtain to keep the dust contained. The cargo is fed through the hoppers, transported to the shed and subsequently moved by covered conveyor to a silo for automatic top-loading of trains as required.
“You could cut corners and go for a least-cost solution but if you are not careful you will get environmental issues, whether that is dust or potentially storing for too long and risking fire,” says Mr Moffat. “We are a key element of the supply chain and believe that you need to invest properly, as we have done. We handled nearly 1m tonnes last year. The potential is huge.”
Geldof has provided biomass handling solutions for logistics and utility customers throughout Europe – among recent projects, the company delivered a wood pellet handling installation for the Electrabel Gelderland power plant in the Netherlands, where barges are unloaded pneumatically at 500 tonnes/hour via a mobile unit that eliminates dust emissions. The complete circuit, from quay to boiler, uses closed conveyor belts, silos, hammer mill and buildings kept under slight pressure to avoid the escape of wood dust.
Yannick Tilley says people tend to talk about biomass as one type of cargo, when the variety is considerable in both quality and handling requirements.
“One of the biggest misconceptions is that wood pellets, wood chips and waste-wood (often processed from demolition sites) can be treated in the same way.”
It is logical that ports want to maximise flexibility and storage, he says. “And of course people on the power side also want maximum flexibility; they have no idea what long-term or medium-term contract they can secure for their supplies, and they want to keep their options open.”
But the materials are very different in their physical properties, he emphasises. Wood pellets tend to be free-flowing and need to be kept dry. Wood chips are less sensitive to moisture and do not have the same dust-related problems. But they tend to stick together, which potentially gives a lot of problems with transport. And because waste-wood often comes from old furniture and fittings, residues of paint and other coatings can be an environmental issue.
“If you just mix it all up and try to come up with a one solution fits all type of installation, it becomes very technically very hard,” says Mr Tilley.


HOW MONKS WITH GREEN HABITS SLASHED THEIR HEATING BILLS
Monastery saves £7,000 a year as Cistercians warm to eco boiler
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By Linda Stewart
Friday, 9 March 2012

Warm worshippers: Our Lady of Bethlehem Abbey in Portglenone
When you rise to pray at 3.30am, that chill morning air can be hard to bear.
But Cistercian monks in Portglenone have installed underfloor heating in the monastic church where the seven common daily prayer sessions are held — and have slashed their carbon footprint as a result.
Our Lady of Bethlehem Abbey on the banks of the River Bann is a typical 1960s building — plenty of concrete, brick and glass, though not much insulation — but the monks have managed to cut their heating costs by more than £7,000 a year by switching to a wood pellet boiler powered by wood grown in Northern Ireland.
The monastery houses 70 Cistercian monks and, as an active cultural centre, welcomes several thousand visitors a year.
The monks had been struggling with the ever-rising cost of heating the many buildings housed within the abbey.
A 350kw wood pellet boiler was installed in the monastery in March 2009 and it is now the only monastery in Ireland to use pellets, known as brites. The boiler provides all the heating and hot water requirements including the underfloor heating in the monastic church — where, at 3.30am every day, the community of monks comes for the first of their seven daily prayer times.
Father Aelred Magee, who led the monastery in the move to renewable energy, said: “Having made the move, I would not look back as we are benefiting from substantial savings on our energy bills. I would certainly recommend a wood pellet boiler and brites to anyone who is considering an alternative way of having their heating and hot water supplied.”
Paula Keelagher, the market development manager for brites, said: “We are delighted that brites are working well for the monks and helping them to reduce their carbon footprint by offsetting 38 tonnes of carbon and 141 tonnes of CO2 in just the last year alone.”

Read more: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/northern-ireland/how-monks-with-green-habits-slashed-their-heating-bills-16128254.html#ixzz1od7PEgoc




REGION 9 SCHOOL TO EXPLORE ALTERNATIVE FUELS
By Eileen M. Adams, Staff Writer
Published on Saturday, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:12 am | Last updated on Saturday, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:12 am


MAINE— The Vocational Region 9 board plans to look into the possibility of switching from heating oil to some other form of energy.
Region 9 Director Brenda Gammon said so far this year, the school has used $6,000 more than the budgeted $34,000 for fuel oil, and the heating season isn't over.
“We'll look into wood pellets or chips and look for grants that could be used for alternative heating,” she said.
The board is placing $45,000 into the heating oil account for the 2012-13 school year.
She and the board have already looked at Oxford Hills Comprehensive High School in Paris and other schools that use wood pellets for heating.
The Facilities Committee will begin its investigation at a meeting later this month. Once the budget is developed in May, Gammon said a special committee may be appointed to conduct a more in-depth exploration.
She will also consider inviting representatives from alternative heating companies to meet with the board.
“We want to see what's available out there that could reduce costs,” she said. “We are a school of technology.”



REBATES HELP CITIZENS INSTALL WOOD PELLET BOILERS
March 5, 2012
Heating oil is more popular for warming homes in New England than in any other part of the country, but this winter has given many homeowners a reason to reconsider the traditional choice of fuels.

With oil prices at a long-term high and federal heating aid slashed to a shadow of last year's offering, needy residents across the region are shopping for new fuels for their heating equipment, according to New Hampshire Public Radio.

State rebates have helped to cut the cost of wood pellet heating for both stoves and boilers. Peter Canning of Berlin, New Hampshire was able to afford a wood-pellet boiler in his home when he joined the state's Model Neighborhood Project and received a $13,000 write-off for his Austrian-made $18,000 boiler.

The initial investment may sound impressive, but the machine is automated for easy use, feeding itself fresh pellets when the fire gets low and even collecting its own ash in a bin for easy cleaning.

People who choose to try wood pellets can save money compared to heating oil bills and also help to foster the forestry economy that is such an important segment of the Northeast business foundation, the news source says.




WRANGELL EXPLORES LOCAL BIOFUEL PRODUCTION
By Charlotte Duren - KSTK News • Image by Ishmeriev
WRANGELL, ALASKA — Wrangell is taking a close look at its future energy needs. The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) held a meeting in Wrangell recently to discuss the issue and the role biofuels are playing in many Alaska communities. KSTK’s Charlotte Duren has more on some of the Southeast projects, as well as what some Wrangell residents are already doing.
As heating oil costs continue to rise, many Alaskans are looking for cheaper alternatives to meet their energy needs. One method is converting plants, paper, or wood waste into biomass to use as a renewable energy source.
“Probably about 5-years ago the fuel prices got extremely high for a period of time and I was burning about 12-hundred gallons of oil a year in my house and I knew I needed to do something different,” he says.





Image by Charlotte Duren
Johnson unloads wood pellets
WRANGELL, ALASKA (2012-03-07) Wrangell is taking a close look at its future energy needs. The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) held a meeting in Wrangell recently to discuss the issue and the role biofuels are playing in many Alaska communities. KSTK’s Charlotte Duren has more on some of the Southeast projects, as well as what some Wrangell residents are already doing.

As heating oil costs continue to rise, many Alaskans are looking for cheaper alternatives to meet their energy needs. One method is converting plants, paper, or wood waste into biomass to use as a renewable energy source.

“Probably about 5-years ago the fuel prices got extremely high for a period of time and I was burning about 12-hundred gallons of oil a year in my house and I knew I needed to do something different,” he says.

That’s Wrangell resident Carl Johnson. Johnson has been heating his two-story home with wood pellets for 5-years. He says it cut his heating costs dramatically.

“I went from about $4,500 a year in oil to about $1,200 in pellets. I spend about half in wood pellets than I would in oil,” he says.

He buys in bulk from a manufacturer in the Lower-48, as well as from a retailer in town. He says heating could cost even less if he could buy from a local manufacturer.  At a recent meeting, SEACC Organizer Jeremy Maxand proposed just that.   

“What we want to do is take a look at what the potential market penetration is for biofuels and look at the feasibility of building a manufacturing plant in Wrangell,” he says.

According to Southeast’s draft Integrated Resource Plan (IRP), a long-term generation and transmission study; there’s been a 50 percent increase in load on the hydropower system over the past 5-years. The IRP recommends the use of biofuels in homes and government buildings to help cut down on the load, as well as heating oil costs.

SEACC recently conducted a survey of residents in Wrangell and Petersburg to find out what types of energy people are using to heat their homes. It also asked whether people would be interested in using locally manufactured biofuel. Maxand, who is also Wrangell’s mayor, says 233 surveys were completed between the two communities.

“What we found in Wrangell and Petersburg, particularly in Wrangell is that 38% of respondents would be willing to purchase or use a locally manufactured product. And that is really important to know before you get too far down the road, to be able to know what the level of interest is,” he says.

Throughout Southeast Alaska, a number of successful biomass boiler projects have been developed. Sealaska Corporation’s Juneau headquarters has switched from oil to wood pellet heat. Craig and Thorne Bay heat school with waste-wood boilers.

Wrangell is considering manufacturing wood and paper briquettes that can be used in home wood stoves. Unlike pellet stoves, briquettes or “bio bricks” can be used just like regular firewood. Maxand says ultimately the conversion to biomass comes down to the needs of each individual community.

“We need to realize we are in a perfect storm right now between the Integrated Resource Plan, state funding, grant opportunities, small mills, municipal solid waste problem, you bring all these things together and you basically end up with an opportunity that can at least solve the heat side of the energy issue in Wrangell,” he says.

Last year Allen Brackley a Research Forest Supervisor for Sitka’s Wood Utilization Center visited Wrangell to speak on the town’s future forest product industry. One potential he says is the conversion of Wrangell’s small mill wood waste.

“There are a lot of renewable energy options, and I think in the short term the most viable biomass renewable energy options are some form of wood, then there’s wind power and solar power and all of those are making gain,” he says.

Brackley estimates it would take 23,000 cords of wood to replace all of the fuel oil used in homes and commercial buildings in Wrangell and Petersburg. This he says is 100% market penetration, which he believes won’t happen.  He estimates that a reasonable rate of penetration over the next 10 years might be 1/3 of the market.

The local tribal government recently sent a letter of interest to Anchorage-based Alaska Village Initiatives requesting assistance in performing a feasibility study for biofuel manufacturing in Wrangell. Later this month Wrangell’s Borough Assembly will vote on a briquette pilot project that could potentially decrease the high costs of municipal waste disposal. If approved it will be passed on to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).






SAVANNAH RIVER SITE STARTS UP OPERATION
Written by Business Wire

Mar. 13, 2012, Aiken, SC - Under Secretary of Energy Thomas D'Agostino joined U.S. Representative Joe Wilson (R-SC) and other senior officials from the Department of Energy (DOE) and Ameresco, Inc., a leading energy efficiency and renewable energy company, to mark the successful operational startup of a new $795M renewable energy fueled facility at the Savannah River Site (SRS).
The 34-acre SRS Biomass Cogeneration Facility is the culmination of 30-months and more than 600,000 hours of labor. This project is also the single largest renewable Energy Savings Performance Contract (ESPC) in the Nation's history. The project sustained and created an estimated 800 jobs, spanning the mechanical, construction, engineering, and supplier sectors. Fully operational, the plant will employ 25 fulltime jobs onsite and support the local logging community.
"Developing clean, renewable sources is an important part of President Obama's all-of-the-above approach to American energy," said Under Secretary D'Agostino in addressing an audience of approximately 150 stakeholders and employees during the ribbon cutting ceremony at SRS. "Projects like the SRS biomass facility are helping to deliver energy efficiency savings that benefit both taxpayers and the environment. Hundreds of people were put to work building this new facility that will save money, dramatically reduce emissions at the Savannah River Site, and help the Department to achieve our energy saving goals."
"I would like to congratulate DOE and Ameresco on their joint investment in a new clean energy source," Congressman Wilson shared with ceremony attendees. "Discovering new innovative energy sources is critically important in today's current economic recession. I am very proud of this private sector investor, as it works to reduce energy costs at Savannah River Site at no additional cost to the taxpayer and creates jobs which will spur economic development."
Acting Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management David Huizenga, DOE Savannah River Manager Dave Moody, and George Sakellaris, Ameresco President & Chief Executive Officer, joined Under Secretary D'Agostino and Rep. Wilson for the ceremonial ribbon cutting.
The SRS Biomass Cogeneration Facility replaced a deteriorating and inefficient 1950s-era coal powerhouse and oil-fired boilers, and will generate an estimated $944 million in savings in energy, operation and maintenance costs over the duration of the contract.
Clean biomass, consisting of local forest residue and wood chips, and bio-derived fuels will be the primary fuel source for the high-tech renewable energy facility, which has the capacity to combust 385,000 tons of forest residue into 20-megawatts of clean power annually.
Energy savings result from replacing the inefficient D Area Powerhouse with the biomass facility, switching from coal to biomass fuel, and improving the efficiency of the operations with new equipment that better matches SRS's load requirements. Surrounding communities also receive added health and environmental benefits tied to air emission reductions, including avoiding 100,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year.
Renewable Recipient of the 2012 Renewable Energy World Excellence in Renewable Energy Award for Biomass Project of the Year, the Biomass Cogeneration Facility also advances Enterprise.SRS (E.SRS) strategic initiatives. It will help utilize SRS's assets, knowledge and expertise to achieve clean energy goals that yield compelling public health and environmental benefits with real energy and cost savings.
"This is a day for celebrating teamwork and progress. The DOE/Ameresco Project Team did a tremendous job seeing this project through construction to operational startup," said DOE-SR Manager Moody. "The SRS Biomass Cogeneration facility is the pinnacle of success in the Site's contributions to support the Department's energy efficiency goals. Startup of this renewable energy facility is proof in motion that we are committed to E.SRS initiatives geared toward utilizing SRS' assets and the knowledge and expertise of our workforce to secure a high-impact future for SRS and to meet national challenges in strategic areas like clean energy."
DOE signed onto an ESPC with Ameresco in 2009 to finance, design, construct, operate, maintain, and fuel the new biomass facility under a 20-year fixed price contract valued at $795 million.
"Today is the capstone on what has been a tremendous endeavor for our partnership. Together with the Department of Energy, the Savannah River Site, the State of South Carolina and our local and regional partners, we've built an award-winning, large-scale sustainable power resource," said Ameresco's President & CEO Sakellaris. "This SRS Biomass Cogeneration Facility, funded by our ESPC is a shining example of how public-private partnerships can create transformative energy infrastructure for the 21st Century."
ESPCs are contracts in which private companies finance, install, and maintain new energy- and water efficient equipment at federal facilities. The government pays no up-front costs, saving taxpayer dollars, and the company's investment is repaid over time by the agency from the cost savings generated by the new equipment. This allows the government to use the private sector to purchase more energy-efficient systems and improve the energy performance of their facilities at no extra cost to the agency or taxpayers.
DOE's Office of Environmental Management brokered the ESPC agreement that supports President Obama's aggressive goal of reducing energy waste across the federal government and increasing the use of renewable energy resources As laid out in the President's Executive Order on Federal Sustainability, the U.S. government can lead by example, by working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 28 percent by 2020, reduce the energy intensity of our facilities by 30 percent by 2015, and significantly expand the amount of electricity we get from renewable energy resources.
About Ameresco Inc.
Founded in 2000, Ameresco, Inc. is a leading independent provider of comprehensive services, energy efficiency, infrastructure upgrades, and renewable energy solutions for facilities throughout North America. With its corporate headquarters in Framingham, MA, Ameresco's workforce of more than 900 employees provides local expertise through its 62 offices in 34 states and five Canadian provinces. For more information, visit www.ameresco.com .



FAQ ON ARMY'S $7 BILLION DRAFT RFP FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY
3/14/2012
On February 24, 2012, the U.S. Army Engineering & Support Center issued a draft request for proposals for renewable and alternative energy (the "Draft RFP"). Since posting our initial blog and Energy Law Alert, we have received a number of inquiries about the details of the solicitation. Below are answers to some of the most frequently asked questions.
Q1: Is this the actual RFP?
A1: No. It is only a draft. The Draft RFP can be found here. The Army is accepting comments until March 21, 2012. Comments can be submitted via the ProjNet website here.
Q2: When will the Army issue the final RFP and what form will it take?
A2: The Draft RFP does not set a date for release of the final RFP, which will take the form of a Multi-Award Task Order Contract (the "MATOC/Final RFP"). For those unfamiliar with the MATOC process, it is very important to understand four fundamental things: (1) the MATOC will not likely offer the opportunity to bid on any specific project (i.e., a "seed project") because the Draft RFP covers multiple technologies, (2) the Army will grant multiple awards under the MATOC, (3) awards granted under the MATOC give awardees the right to bid on individual Task Order contracts issued by specific facilities for specific projects (e.g., a Task Order for a 10 MW solar PV project at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington), (4) parties that are not awardees in the MATOC process may not bid on these Task Orders. Thus, a developer must be an awardee under the MATOC/Final RFP in order to have the right to bid on individual project development opportunities. Before issuing the MATOC/Final RFP, the Army will need to complete its review of all of the comments that it receives by the March 21 deadline. At some point after the MATOC/Final RFP is published, the Army will host a pre-proposal conference in Huntsville, Alabama where participants will hear presentations regarding the program, the scope of work, contractual considerations, and small-business considerations.
Q3: Is the Department of Defense really mandated to procure 25% of its electricity from renewable resources by 2025?
A3: No. Section 2852 of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2007 (Pub. L. No. 109-364) codifies the Department of Defense's ("DoD") voluntary goal to produce or procure 25% of its total electricity consumption from renewable energy sources by 2025. This is not a Congressional mandate; however, the DoD is taking the goal very seriously. On August 10, 2011, the office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Installations, Energy & Environment ("ASA IE&E") issued an information paper announcing the formation of the Energy Initiatives Office Task Force ("EITF"). The job of the EITF would be (and now is) to serve as the central managing office for large-scale Army renewable energy projects. In that information paper, the Army estimated that an investment of up to $7.1 billion over the next 10 years would be required to procure 2.1 million megawatt-hours ("MWh") annually to meet Army goals and federal mandates, and to provide enhanced energy security. The Draft RFP is the next step in meeting those objectives.
Q4: What quantities of generating capacity, in installed megawatts ("MW"), is the Army looking to procure through power purchase agreements ("PPA") or equivalent contracts in each of the four categories (wind, solar, biomass, geothermal)?
A4: The Draft RFP sets out specific quantities of power, in total kilowatt-hours ("kWh") that the Army intends to procure through each of four types of contracts: (1) Solar PPA, (2) Wind PPA, (3) Biomass PPA, and (4) Geothermal PPA. The Draft RFP also states that applicants are to assume the period of performance of those contracts is 30 years. If the proposed procurement quantities are to be delivered over 30 years, and assuming a range of capacity factors for each technology type, we anticipate that the total installed MW of each to fall somewhere in the following ranges:
Technology Porposed
Procurement
(kWh) Assumed Capacity
Factor Projected Total
Installed Capacity
(MW)
Solar 1,500,000,000 12-18% 31.7 - 47.6
Wind 9,000,000,000 20-40% 85.6 - 171.2
Biomass 19,000,000,000 40-50% 144.6 - 180.8
Geothermal 8,000,000,000 60-70% 43.5 - 50.7
We note that the total procurement quantity (37.5 million MWh), if delivered in equal amounts over 30 years, would yield an annual procurement of 1.25 million MWh. This number is slightly more than half of the annual procurement that the ASA IE&E, in its August 10, 2011 information paper, estimated would be required to meet the Army's renewable energy needs.
Q5: Is there a minimum or maximum project size?
A5: The Draft RFP does not specify project sizes, only the aggregate procurement quantity for each technology type. The MATOC/Final RFP, when released, will result in multiple indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity ("ID/IQ") contracts with a portion of the awards reserved for small businesses (for details on what size projects are reserved for small businesses, see our February 28, 2012 blog or February 29, 2012 Energy Law Alert). The capacity within these ID/IQ contracts (e.g., the 1.5 million MWh capacity proposed for solar) will be shared using the fair opportunity process (a procedure under federal acquisition law) subject to a few restrictions. Specific project sizes, specific site requirements, and government-specific facility requirements will be specified by individual facilities in their Task Order requests for proposals that will be issued against the MATOC.
Q6: Where can a project be located?
A6: Projects may be located on "any federal property located within the Continental United States including Alaska, Hawaii, territories, provinces or other property under the control of the United States Government" for the period of the contract, or "on any properties available for use by the [developer] that are in the proximity of the . . . federal property" to which the electricity will be delivered. Although this response sounds like "anywhere," individual facility Task Orders may set out specific site requirements and Government-specific facility requirements that could impact the facility's location.
Q7: Does the Army want to buy renewable energy facilities that developers build for it?
A7: No. The Army wants to enter into long-term PPAs or equivalent contracts only. Developers will be responsible for all aspects of operating and maintaining the facilities.
Q8: Can a developer sell the energy to the Army and keep the renewable energy credits ("RECs")?
A8: No. Army policy currently requires that RECs "resulting from the renewable energy generated on-site to remain with the Government." What constitutes "on-site" is unclear, however. Projects may be located on "any federal property" or "on any properties available for use by the [developer] that are in the proximity of the . . . federal property." Because the Draft RFP specifically states that it is the government's intent to use the RECs to meet its renewable energy procurement target, we expect that all individual contracts will require that the government receive the RECs. However, prospective bidders may wish to seek confirmation of this point in comments submitted to the Army.
Q9: What types of facility qualify as "biomass"?
A9: "[A]ll technologies that utilize organic material to generate a fuel or energy such as, but not limited to, Biomass-to-Power, Waste to Energy, Refuse Derived Fuels, bio-fuels, etc." Due to the variability in available waste streams and the type of system required to convert the material to a usable form of energy, the technology-specific requirements will be provided in each individual Task Order request for proposals.
Q10: Can technologies other than solar, wind, biomass, and geothermal be bid in?
A10: The Draft RFP is unclear on this point. The draft sets out specific procurement quantities only for solar, wind, biomass, and geothermal technologies. However, Section C.4.h. defines "[a]lternative energy technologies" to mean "all other future renewable and current and future alternative technologies . . . [which] may include such items as fuel cells, ground source heat pumps, thermal recovery systems, ocean oscillation power generation systems, energy storage, batteries, micro-grids, etc." The draft RFP also has a very broad definition of "renewable energy," and it explicitly contemplates the possibility that combined heat and power or "alternative fuels" may be implemented. We recommend that developers of technologies that do not fit into one of the four prescribed procurement buckets file comments with the Army by the March 21 deadline asking whether the procurement will be strictly limited to the four technologies for which it has established kWh targets.
Q11: Could a bidder propose a cutting-edge technology?
A11: Probably not. The Draft RFP refers to "Commercial Technology," which "typically means a technology in general use in the commercial marketplace in the United States at the time the Task Order RFP is issued." The Draft RFP goes on to describe technologies "in general use" as those that have been used in three or more commercial projects in the United States in the same general application as in the proposed project, and each of those projects has been in commercial operation for at least five years. If a bidder has any doubt about whether the Army would view a given technology as commercial, the question may be a good one to raise in the bidder's comments.
Q12: What type of facilities is the Army targeting? Existing facilities? Greenfield development?
A12: Again, the Draft RFP is unclear on this point. While the document does not explicitly prohibit bids from existing renewable energy plants, the assumption appears to be that bids will come from facilities yet to be constructed.
Q13: What about National Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA") compliance?
A13: To reduce as much risk as possible to developers, the government intends to complete the requirements for NEPA compliance, to the extent practicable, before the issuance of a Task Order request for proposals for a particular facility. The government also intends to do the following before the issuance of a Task Order: (1) collect and share site data; (2) consult with the local utility company and utility regulatory authorities to ascertain and share constraints, procedures, and costs associated with grid interconnection; and (3) obtain necessary federal, state, and local agency approvals where possible.
Please contact any of the attorneys listed below if you have questions regarding the military's involvement in renewable energy development:
Energy Development:
William H. Holmes at (503) 294-9207 or whholmes@stoel.com
David L. Benson at (206) 386-7584 or dlbenson@stoel.com
David P. Hattery at (206) 386-7528 or dphattery@stoel.com
David T. Quinby at (612) 373-8825 or dtquinby@stoel.com
Chad T. Marriott at (503) 294-9339 or ctmarriott@stoel.com
Government/Military Contracting:
S. Lane Tucker at (907) 263-8411 or sltucker@stoel.com
Thomas A. Ellison at (801) 578-6957 or taellison@stoel.com


SELMA BIOMASS PLANT TO START IN 2013
Written by Argus Media

Mar. 13, 2012, London, UK - US biomass producer Zilkha Biomass expects its first large-scale commercial pellet plant to be operational by late 2013, the company has told Argus.
Zilkha acquired a 500,000 t/yr regular “white” pellet plant in Selma, Alabama, two years ago when the previous owners failed to make the business viable. Zilkha will adapt the plant to produce 275,000 t/yr of “Zilkha Black” pellets.
“We have about a year's worth of work once the offtake agreements for the plant have been finalised,” Zilkha vice-president for business development Larry Weick told Argus. “So we are looking at a late-2013 start-up. The previous plant was not successful due to several factors, but Zilkha is confident that operating the plant at 275,000 t/yr, well below the original design capacity of 500,000 t/yr, will be economically viable.”
The company is looking to establish several plants, including projects which would export through Mobile, Alabama, and also projects in British Columbia, Canada.
“It makes more sense to have multiple plants that are shipping through the same ports,” Weick said. “Although we cannot confirm how many more plants we are looking at constructing, our Selma plant is the first in a series of 200,000-400,000 t/yr plants that we will construct in the future.”
Zilkha Black pellets are not torrefied, according to Weick, but are pre-processed according to a technology acquired by the company a few years ago.
“Although both routes can theoretically produce a dense, waterproof pellet, there is a pretty clear difference between Zilkha Black pellets and torrefied pellets,” Weick said. “Essentially torrefaction drives the process conditions so hard and so far that the final material is really charcoal, whereas we use a completely different approach and avoid that more destructive route. As a result, we can make a good, hard, low dust pellet that is waterproof without incorporating any additives in the pellet.”
Zilkha believes that pre-processed biomass either as Zilkha Black pellets or perhaps torrefied material will be the preferred biomass product once it is readily available, due to its reduced capital costs for conversion, its coal-like properties, the safety benefits due to less dust and the fact that it can be stored outside — despite the higher purchase price of the fuel, Weick said.
“Our first cargo was loaded in the rain, and the fuel was absolutely fine,” he said. “Black pellets are around 10pc cheaper all-in, even though the purchase price is higher."


MAINE FOREST SERVICE CUTS RIBBON AT TWO PELLET BOILER PROJECTS
By Luke Geiver | March 16, 2012




Waterville, Maine, High School students will now have the opportunity to study wood pellet heat in person. Through the Maine Forest Service’s Wood-to-Energy Public Building Program, the school and city hall in Gardiner officially cut the ribbon on wood pellet boiler installation projects.
Each boiler will provide more than $105,000 per year in energy savings and create 23 new jobs. Earlier this week, the MFS held separate ribbon cutting ceremonies to announce the completion of the installation projects.
The Maine Forest Service used part of the $11.4 million it received through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in 2009 to fund the boiler installation projects. To date, the Wood-to-Energy Public Building Program has funded 22 biomass boiler projects in municipalities, schools, colleges, universities and a hospital.
At the Gardiner project site, two Maine Energy Systems OkoFen wood pellet boilers in a modular energy box structure were installed at the City Hall by Heutz Premium Pellets of Lewiston. Over the next 25 years, the $122,000 project will generate $195,000 in energy savings. The building also received a $61,000 ARRA grant. The municipality was the first in the state to install a modular wood pellet boiler system.
The $2 million Waterville High School project included a biomass boiler and the installation of fuel storage and handling areas. According to the school, the project will reduce heating costs by 40 percent. In addition to the funding provided through the MFS, the school also received $750,000 through an ARRA grant.
Bill Beardsley, commissioner for the Maine Department of Conservation, said he was pleased that both organizations had the foresight to make such significant infrastructure investments. “Local officials not only are supporting their own residents and taxpayers, but they also are making an important contribution to Maine’s forest-product industry and our energy independence,” he said.

PORT OF WILMINGTON SEES EXPORTS RISE; DIRECTION REMAINS MURKY
________________________________________
March 22, 2012By Alison Lee Satake




A growing demand overseas for North Carolina natural products led to an increase in container volume at the Port of Wilmington in 2011, reported ports officials on Thursday. Southern yellow pine is one such product; demand for it contributed to an 11.2 percent increase in container volume in 2011.

“Revenues are up and expenses are down,” said Jeff Strader, interim CEO for the North Carolina State Ports Authority. “That means a bottom-line profit for the authority to date this fiscal year, putting us in our strongest financial position since 2008.”

Of the 11.2 percent increase in container movement, exports rose 9.6 percent and imports rose 4.3 percent. Wood fiber and wood chips are being exported in bulk for lumber to feed the recovering housing market in European countries such as Turkey. The U.K. markets are demanding wood pellets from North Carolina that are compressed and used as a coal substitute to fuel power plants.

Revenue is up by about $3 million so far this fiscal year over the same period last fiscal year, said Strader, who presented at the Cape Fear Chapter of the N.C. World Trade Association event on Thursday.

In comparison, Wilmington’s neighboring competitor ports posted more modest growth in volume. Norfolk, Va. and Charleston, S.C. reported a 1.2 percent increase while Savannah, Ga. reported a 3.5 percent increase last year.

Strader said the N.C. State Ports Authority expects to see further growth in its bulk cargo, especially of agricultural products such as fertilizer and grain. Liquid fertilizer, UAN, is one such new commodity in Wilmington added in 2011.

Meanwhile, a statewide Maritime Strategy Study will be released at the end of April, which will inform the future direction of the ports.

“NCIT (North Carolina International Terminal) remains on hold,” Strader said. “The market has to drive the opportunity.”

He said the ports authority has studied the projected loss in business for the local ports with the expansion of the Panama Canal in 2014.

“That’s a question we’ve struggled with and it doesn’t have an absolute answer,” he said, because carriers are dealing with ever-changing global variables.

“Our focus is on the existing facilities,” he said. Improvements to the Wilmington Harbor will allow smaller class vessels.

“Federal funding has been allocated to the Wilmington Harbor Navigation Improvement Study that would improve safety along the navigation channel and help us better support businesses using the Port of Wilmington,” he said.

The state ports authority has transitioned from being under the state commerce department to the N.C. Department of Transportation, Strader said. But, he said the ports authority wants to maintain a relationship with the commerce department and has a staff person who acts a liaison with it to do so.

And he also said the state ports authority board of directors and the N.C. Secretary of Transportation Gene Conti will determine if and when a new CEO will be hired.


BIOMASS POWER COMPANY EXPANDING INTO U.S. MARKET

Mar 19, 2012

Imperative Energy Ltd., a provider of biomass heat and power solutions in the UK and Ireland, said it is expanding its presence in the U.S. market with the announcement of two corporate milestones.
The first is a partnership with Northline Energy, a Lynnwood, Wash.-based provider of biomass combustion systems. The collaboration blends Imperative's project finance and project development expertise with Northline's U.S.-based technical team to offer fully financed biomass solutions to users under long-term Energy Supply Agreements. A project pipeline with a capital expenditure of over $100 million in the next few years is already planned.
The second development is a proposed Bio-Park in Taunton, Mass. The park is modeled on a similar campus in Ireland designed by Imperative and partner, J.P. Prendergast. The Bio-Park will incorporate a biomass-fired CHP plant, wood pellet production facility and biopharma facility. A planning application for the Irish campus was recently submitted, while a detailed feasibility study has already been initiated for a $10+ million Taunton, Mass. project.


DRY BIOMASS MAKES A DIFFERENCE
February 10, 2012
By: Brett Hanson
Dry biomass makes a difference. Paying suppliers a price based on energy content rather than weight would improve boiler efficiency and the overall efficiency of the supply chain according to researchers.
It may sound obvious but the moisture content in biomass can greatly affect the efficiency of a boiler yet little is done in this country to dry the material before it is used.
Often, there is no incentive for suppliers to dry biomass prior to delivery; in fact, dry biomass may penalize a supplier if they are paid on a green tonne basis. FP Innovations is trying to change this by advocating a change from price based on green weight to price based on energy content and they have developed a tool to help.
Sylvain Volpé, a researcher with FPInnovations explains their research into the advantages of drying biomass.
“The energy available in the biomass and the efficiency of boilers is directly related to moisture content. Moisture is a concern because we’re delivering energy to the plant and the more water there is in the biomass, the less energy is available. Also, by transporting less energy in every truck load, we basically pay to deliver water to the plant, making the energy more expensive.”

Sylvain Volpé

Volpé says that depending on the season there are several simple strategies for drying and thereby increasing the every content in biomass. In the summer months simply storing the material at roadside where it is exposed to ample air flow and sunlight for three to four months can reduce moisture content significantly.
In the fall and winter when there is more precipitation, tarping the material at roadside is also highly effective. He recommends narrow piles be made to expose as much surface area to sunlight as possible.
“In the summer months, uncovered biomass piles can lose up to 10 to 25 % of its moisture. If those piles are not covered before fall and winter precipitations, moisture content can go up by 10 to 15 %. A reduction of 5% usually represents the breakeven point of the covering operation,” Volpé said. “But even if the breakeven point isn’t reached by the drying strategy, a reduction of moisture content can still help meet boiler requirements, which in the end can justify the operation.”
When the price of biomass is determined by the weight of material delivered only the user of the biomass benefits from dry material. However to determine a price based on energy content one needs to first determine the moisture level of the material and then calculate the amount of energy. That’s where FPJoule comes in.
“FPJoule is a tool that was developed with two main objectives in mind; first, increase awareness among biomass users that feedstock quality, mainly moisture content, has a considerable impact on the financial feasibility of an energy project; and second, that biomass is a financially viable alternative to replace fossil fuels to generate heat, especially in the case of fuel oil” Volpé said.
“FPJoule calculates the amount of energy available in the forest biomass according to three parameters; first, the species group (softwood, hardwood or mixed species), the part of the tree that is used (stem, bark, whole tree) and the moisture content. Then, using the traditional method of payment for biomass, either dollars per tonne or metres square and calculates the monetary equivalent in dollars per gigajoule or megawatt hour.”
FPJoule also calculates the annual amount of biomass required to replace the quantity of fossil fuel currently used and the annual potential savings.
Volpé says that FPInnovations is working on developing a fast and accurate way of determining the moisture content of biomass. The current method involves taking a sample from every truckload and drying it at 105 degrees for 24 hours or until it stops losing weight. From there the exact moisture content can be determined.
“You don’t have an instant result, what we are looking at right now is trying to find a proper tool that could quickly and as accurately as possible give you a reading of moisture content of biomass. The quick reading tools out there right now are not very accurate; they will give a reading plus or minus 5% in 65% of the cases. In a lot of cases you are quite far from accurate,” Volpé said.
“In Europe this method of payment for energy is being used but to my knowledge it is not used anywhere in North America,” Volpé said. “There is no reason why we shouldn’t pay for biomass based on its energy content rather than on a weight basis as we are doing right now.” ◊


INDUSTRY EXPERTS DISCUSS PERFECT STORM OF WOOD PELLET GROWTH
By Luke Geiver | March 23, 2012




William Strauss, founder of Maine Energy Systems and president and CEO of FutureMetrics, demonstrated the operation of a fuel calculator to the crowd at the Northeast Biomass Heating Expo in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., March 21-23. His team developed the tool to illustrate the cost savings that come along with installing and using a wood pellet boiler.
Strauss used the calculator to explain that with a long-term, low-interest loan, a wood pellet boiler can be close to free. And that’s what MES wants for its customers. “We have a great argument that [installing a wood pellet boiler] will cut your heating costs in half,” he said. “But the hurdle is the initial capital costs.”
Laura Richardson, coordinator for the New Hampshire Office of Energy and Planning, detailed a program that helped homeowners deal with those initial capital costs. The rebate program provides 30 percent of the system and labor costs associated with purchasing and installing a new boiler for the end user, and assisted with 67 boiler installations in one year. “”We are stuck in New Hampshire with fuel costs,” she said. “We see the possibility for the bulk pellet industry to take off in New Hampshire. It is a perfect storm.”
That perfect storm Richardson referred to, was evident in her data that showed the fuel price disparity in February, when the price per million Btu of wood pellets in the state was roughly $15 and the price for the same volume of heating oil was nearly $30. The success of the rebate program has already helped Richardson see firsthand the growth of the wood pellet industry in her state. “We are excited about the leverage we are getting out of this,” she said. “The consumers are inspiring the industry to put up their own capital to expand in the region.” And her department continues to field inquiries from entrepreneurs interested in the pellet delivery and pellet manufacturing business, she said.
“Many people ask, ‘Won’t pellets get more expensive as time goes by?’” Strauss said. They won’t, he assured the audience. As the price of heating oil goes up, he said, the gap in price between it and wood pellets will only get bigger. That is, in part, because diesel fuel costs go hand in hand with heating oil costs, Strauss said.
Although both Richardson and Strauss were able to show examples of how a wood pellet boiler can be installed economically, Strauss did point out that if the perfect storm Richardson was alluding to grows even more, the wood pellet industry in the U.S. could take a step back. “By 2014, winter supply and demand will be different,” he said. “Demand will outpace supply and that will be bad for industry.”
His teams at MES and FutureMetrics already believe wood pellet boiler use is hitting or has potentially hit critical mass, as many people have a wood pellet boiler, or know someone who does.
“Consumers won’t switch (from oil heat to wood pellets) if they don’t see infrastructure there,” Richardson said.
For more information on the Northeast Heating Expo, visit www.nebiomassheat.com.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

G Brown Newsletter Feb 2012

WOOD PELLET NEWSLETTER
February 2012
Gerald W brown * 7202 County Road U * Danbury, WI 54830 Phone 715-866-8535
Gerald Brown is solely responsible for the content in this newsletter


MARION RESIDENTS FEAR PELLET PLANT IS GEARING UP FOR BUSINESS

• METSO TO SUPPLY FINLAND'S LARGEST PELLET-FIRED HEATING PLANT TO TAMPEREEN ENERGIANTUOTANTO

• D.C. CLEAN ENERGY INVESTOR CALLS BIOMASS SECURE SOLUTION

• WOOD PELLET BBQ GRILL BY BOB GRILLSON

• FIVE SELF-DISCHARGING WOOD BIOMASS SILO TANKERS ARE TO BE DELIVERED BY RYDER TO SOLID FUELS WHOLESALER

• WOOD PELLET PRICING NOW PART OF N.H. ENERGY REPORT


• ENVIVA, E.ON SIGN MULTI-YEAR BIOMASS SUPPLY CONTRACT


• VIRIDIS ENERGY COMPLETES ACQUISITION OF NOVA SCOTIA WOOD PELLET MANUFACTURER



• ENVIVA SIGNS WOOD PELLET SUPPLY AGREEMENT WITH E.ON

• APX –ENDEX WOOD PELLET EXCHANGE HAS COLD START

• NEW OWNERS SET TO FIRE UP PELLET PLANT


• GARDINER SAVING ESTIMATE OF $195,000 WITH PELLETS


• SPECIAL REPORT: WOOD PELLETS FUEL MAINE'S ECONOMY



• GERMANY MAPS OUT FINANCING PLAN FOR RENEWABLE ENERGIES



• USDA OFFICIAL VISITS CORINTH WOOD PELLET PLANT


• WAYS SOUGHT TO BOOST MAINE'S WOOD PELLET INDUSTRY


• CAN AN AUTOMATIC, PELLET BOILER LURE CONSUMERS AWAY FROM HEATING OIL?


• NEW FROM THE JERSEY SHORE: HIGH OCTANE BIOFUEL

• CHEAPER THAN OIL, PROPANE, BUT NOT NATURAL GAS

• WHAT IS HAPPENING IN RUSSIAN BIOFUEL INDUSTRY?

• SLC OFFICIALS BEGIN TALKS ON ALTERNATIVES TO NATURAL GAS

• FIRE DAMAGES WOOD PELLET MILL IN STRONG

• FURNACE SYSTEM COULD BOOST PELLET INDUSTRY IN U.S.



• THE POTENTIAL OF WOOD PELLET PRODUCTION IN EUROPE IS REALIZED ONLY BY 61%

• TILBURY POWER STATION BLAZES AS WOOD PELLETS CATCH FIRE
• WOOD STOVES LINKED TO TRACE LEVELS OF HEAVY METALS

• TILBURY POWER PLANT FIRE MAY HAVE STARTED ON CONVEYOR BELT

• HUD SECRETARY AGREES TO SEN. COLLINS’ REQUEST FOR NEW RULES FOR PELLET BOILERS






















MARION RESIDENTS FEAR PELLET PLANT IS GEARING UP FOR BUSINESS
By Jim Hook




In this Public Opinion file photo, Marion firefighters battle the... (Public Opinion file photo)
MARION - Neighbors to a former wood pellet factory in Marion fear operations may restart.
The A.J. Stoves and Pellets plant was the site of three dust explosions - two in August 2008 and a third in 2010. The operation was declared a nuisance, and occupants ordered from the building.
Neighbors say large equipment was delivered Tuesday to the plant at 5773 Colorado St. Extended. One piece appeared to be ductwork. Another appeared to be an industrial ventilator. A third piece, delivered on a flatbed tractor trailer, was connected to the building with ductwork, they said.
Dawn Largent reacted to the appearance of the equipment after nearly two years without dirt and noise. She lives with her sister, Bonnie, across the railroad tracks from the plant.
"I got physically sick, and broke down and cried," she said. "It was torture to live here. You cannot get away from the noise. It absolutely drives you crazy. I've had eye infections. I've been to the doctor with breathing problems."
The factory was loud, noisy, dirty and unsafe, Bonnie Largent said.
A month after a dust explosion on Aug. 2, 2010, Guilford Township Supervisors declared the building to be a "dangerous structure and a public nuisance" and the Commonwealth Code Inspection Service deemed the building unsafe and ordered it vacated.
"We have not rescinded that declaration," township solicitor Sam Wiser said. "The township has not been made aware of any improvements. I think the township will look into the matter and determine what the best course of action is."
Guilford Township Supervisor Greg Cook said the township has no knowledge about any plans that owner Archie Jones may have.
"I have no comment," Jones told a reporter by telephone on Wednesday.
The plant installed safety devices after the 2008 explosions, but a sprinkler system was not turned on the day of the most recent explosion, according to local officials.
The converted feed mill is located down the street from a woodworking shop and a kitchen craftsman. For about five years the factory ground wooden pallets into dust that was compressed into pellets for fuel.
At the time of one of the explosions in 2008, pupils were at recess at Marion Elementary School about 1,500 feet away, Bonnie Largent said. Explosions were rare, but the noise was constant, she said. The machines could start as early as 6 a.m. and sometimes ran until midnight.
"It caused you to be sick worrying about what was going to happen next," she said. "The machines made a loud roaring noise. The sound was a cross between a train running and a jack hammer -- a high-pitched whine that runs through the house, and you can't escape it. A bunch of us have talked to a lawyer about it."
"A lot of people are afraid to voice their opinions," Dawn Largent said.
-----------------------
Jim Hook can be reached at 717-262-4759 and jhook@publicopinionnews.com.


METSO TO SUPPLY FINLAND'S LARGEST PELLET-FIRED HEATING PLANT TO TAMPEREEN ENERGIANTUOTANTO
* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.
Thu Feb 2, 2012 3:01am EST
Metso Corporation's press release on February 2nd, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. local time
Metso will supply a pellet-fired heating plant to Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy in the city of Tampere in Finland. The plant will be delivered by the Metso-Wärtsilä joint venture MW Power. The delivery will comprise a full-scope turn-key boiler plant solution, including all the necessary equipment and commissioning. The plant will be Finland's largest pellet-fired plant, based on a technological solution that is the first of its kind in Finland. The value of the order will not be disclosed.
The heating plant will be used as a peak load and backup plant and will replace some of the capacity of the existing oil- and gas-fuelled boiler plants. The plant will be fired with wood pellets and its heat input will be around 33 MW. Replacing the old boilers with a new modern pellet-fired boiler will significantly reduce the CO2 emissions resulting from the production of district heating.
"Our cooperation with MW Power has been smooth. When things started to fall in place concerning the plant's technology, it was clear that MW Power is the right partner for us for this challenging project. It was also important to us that the supplier would commit to the project with the necessary resources. This project will bring new expertise to Finland, and Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy wishes to be at the forefront in sustainable energy generation. District heating has always been an efficient and environmentally friendly alternative and it will remain so in the future as well," says Development Manager Timo Heinonen from Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy.
"It is inspiring to introduce new technology into the market for the first time, and commercial success is naturally our ultimate goal. Previously, peak load plants have been using fossil fuels because there was no other technology available. The technological solution supplied to Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy will bring new opportunities to gear the structure of Finnish district heat production towards the goals of sustainable development," confirms Sales Manager Teemu Koskela from MW Power.
The production of heat at the new plant will start in late 2012. The order is included in Pulp, Paper and Power's first quarter 2012 orders received.
Technical information
Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy's pellet heating plant utilizes a solution that combines pulverized combustion technology with MW Power's boiler expertise. The pellet fuel is pulverized in separate grinding mills and burned in a pulverized combustion boiler. The start-up and load control of the combustion process is remarkably rapid and the pulverized fuel allows for clean, energy efficient and flexible heat generation. Pulverized pellet combustion is new to Finland, but MW Power has been using it in Sweden on a smaller scale.
Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy, a subsidiary of Tampere Power Utility, is responsible for the group's electricity and district heating production, maintenance and development. Increasing the proportion of renewable energy sources is part of the Tampere Power Utility's strategy.
MW Power, a Metso-Wärtsilä joint venture, provides medium and small-scale power and heating plant solutions for sustainable energy generation, focusing on flexible utilization of local renewables, as well as innovative technologies and service capabilities. www.mwpower.fi
Metso is a global supplier of sustainable technology and services for mining, construction, power generation, automation, recycling and the pulp and paper industries. We have about 29,000 employees in more than 50 countries. www.metso.com
For further information, please contact:
Teemu Koskela, Sales Manager, Power business line, Metso, tel. +358 50 400 8721
Jussi Orhanen, Director, Heat & Power plants, Power business line, Metso, tel. +358 50 595 1152
Timo Heinonen, Development Manager, Tampereen Energiantuotanto Oy, tel. +358 40 801 6805




D.C. CLEAN ENERGY INVESTOR CALLS BIOMASS SECURE SOLUTION
By Luke Geiver | February 01, 2012

Wood pellets offer an opportunity for biomass industry growth in 2012, according to Peter O'Keefe, given factors like wavering support for nuclear power and European utility demands.


The Washington D.C.-based clean energy investment team at Leaf Clean Energy Company has been around since 2007, and according to Peter O’Keefe, director of the company, his team has seen the ups and downs of the market. For 2012, O’Keefe believes the woody biomass market is looking up. During a webinar hosted by the American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE), O’Keefe provided perspective on the growth potential for the biomass sector in 2012, telling listeners that woody biomass “is an area that we think has tremendous promise in the U.S.” With investments in a biomass power facility in Georgia and another in Florida, Leaf Clean Energy is looking for more opportunities, he also said.
The reasoning behind the company’s search for new biomass investment is directly linked to the base load power supply and future changes in that market. “If you look at base load power and the attack that it is under, biomass is absolutely a secure solution for us.” O’Keefe pointed out the recent domestic and global issues with nuclear power and the push by European utilities to use renewable energy resources such as pellets. The wood pellet industry is an area he believes will drive growth in the biomass industry based on Europe’s demand for the product and from census data from 2000 to 2010 that shows wood pellets are the fastest growing home heating fuel over that span. “We are blessed with an abundant biomass resource in the U.S.,” he said.
The undeniable abundance of woody biomass, coupled with the sentiment that biomass project development makes sense even in a tough project financing environment was shared by Michael Zimmer of Thomson Hine LLP and it resonated throughout the entire webinar that included over 150 national attendees. Zimmer pointed out new biomass power transactions and development in Connecticut, Texas, Illinois and California as places that exemplify successful projects, and he outlined a number of factors that will affect the biomass industry in 2012, including EPA regulatory actions on greenhouse gas emissions and the Boiler MACT rules, and, a national carbon market possibility in California. Zimmer also pointed out that roughly 10 states comprise almost 70 percent of the biomass market potential in the U.S., and, that a 2012 farm bill could foster the demand and further growth for energy crops. As for the potential of waste heat recovery and combined heat and power facilities, Zimmer had his own analogy.
“We are the Saudi Arabia of capital innovation, we are the Saudi Arabia of innovative renewable energy development,” and he said, “we are also the Saudi Arabia of waste heat which provides a unique business opportunity.”
Aside from waste heat recovery, O’Keefe shared another opportunity in the biomass industry. For him, wastewater treatment and residual utilization is a “stranded opportunity.” There are over 16,000 wastewater treatment plants in the U.S., he explained, and those plants generate 7 million tons of residual matter. Most of the power plants located next to those wastewater facilities, he added, “are very very old,” some of which are over 100 years old. “They are absolutely in need of innovative solutions for dealing with wastewater (and wastewater residuals) for the next century.”
Bob Cleaves, president of the Biomass Power Association, also participated in the webinar, asking the other participants who included Jordan Collins, formerly with the U.S. DOE and now with ML Strategies, and the project development finance expert John May, managing director at Stern Brothers and Co., “Is the glass half full or half empty in the sector (biomass) at the moment?”
While Collins provided a semi-enthusiastic response pointing to the difficulty with biomass power pricing linked to the low prices of natural gas, May provided a different take. For his response, May said, “Oh, definitely half full.” For May, although the classic biomass power deal is tougher to get right now, his firm is busy working in the pellet market. “We’ve got five or six pellet deals we are working on in the South,” he said, “that is a very interesting area and a very financeable area.”


WOOD PELLET BBQ GRILL BY BOB GRILLSON

Have you ever heard of Bob Grillson? Well we hadn’t either but upon researching the name more, we found that Bob Grillson is not a person but rather a grill that allows for an extraordinary barbecuing experience. Little do grillers know that burned meat juice, grease, and charcoal are carcinogenic and could lead to health issues so instead of using briquettes, this grill uses wooden pellets to promote a healthier and safer barbecue by using the clean burning pellets.
The “green” grill creates a great barbecue taste, auto cleans itself after grilling, and is more like cooking in an oven because it can be used to cure and barbeque meats as well as bake a pizza. If you have a laced out crib with a deck and still use a small charcoal grill, get with the times and check out the Bob Grillson


03/02/2012
FIVE SELF-DISCHARGING WOOD BIOMASS SILO TANKERS ARE TO BE DELIVERED BY RYDER TO SOLID FUELS WHOLESALER






Woodpellets2U, a division of CPL Distribution.

They will be supplied under a contract hire deal that will see the custom-built Feldbinder bodies getting a double life as they are retrofitted to new chassis after six years.

Two 32-tonne DAF CF85-410s, with a capacity of 38,000 litres, and two 26-tonne Mercedes-Benz Axor 2533s, with 30,000 litre capacity, will follow the 26-tonne DAF CF75-310, which has served s the pilot test for these Feldbinder silo tankers, thought to be the first of their kind to operate in the UK.

"We are already delivering thousands of tonnes of wood biomass and solid fuels around the country and across Europe, but we wanted to streamline the operation in line with our quest to deliver the highest quality product," comments Tim Minett, CPL Distribution's CEO.

"We had been approached by a variety of outsourced vehicle providers, ranging from truck manufacturers to finance houses, but none could offer a complete package," he continues. "With such specialised and expensive vehicles, we needed a competent supplier used to operating complicated vehicles and one that could put together a complete finance, maintenance and aftercare package."

Minett used to be chief executive of a truck rental and contract hire specialist firm and says Ryder was the only company with the expertise and flexibility to put together such a deal.

"Specifications were drawn up for 26- and 32-tonne tankers, with the chassis supplied on a six-year contract hire agreement, while the Feldbinder tanker bodies will have an extended 12-year double life and be retrofitted to new chassis after the initial six year period," explains Minett.

"Such is the flexibility provided by Ryder that the company was even able to take over ownership of the initial truck we had ordered ourselves and contract hire that back to us," he adds.


Minett says the firm knew it would need specialist trucks to transport and discharge wood pellets, and reveals that it initially looked at vehicles used with animal feed. However, tests revealed that the pellets would be degraded.

"We knew that 40% of energy in Austria is produced from wood biomass, so we looked at how the experts handled it and made contact with a local specialist manufacturer of truck bodies, Feldbinder, which had set up operation in the UK," he recalls.

"We were very impressed by their technical expertise and so ordered one 26-tonne truck to our specification. But we clearly needed a larger fleet of trucks to meet expected demand for our new biomass fuels.

"Overall, Ryder has exceeded our expectations in terms of service delivery to the extent that I've been virtually able to forget about the delivery of these new trucks and focus my attentions on our core business."



WOOD PELLET PRICING NOW PART OF N.H. ENERGY REPORT
By Luke Geiver | February 02, 2012

New Hampshire follows Maine as the second Northeastern U.S. state to include wood pellet pricing data in its weekly energy report.


The New Hampshire Office of Energy and Planning (OEP) is now the second state-affiliated energy information provider in the Northeastern U.S. to include average residential pricing for wood pellets used in home heating applications, following Maine, the first to include wood pellet pricing data in its weekly fuel report. As of January 30, 2012, the New Hampshire OEP fuel prices report shows that one ton of delivered wood pellets costs roughly $237. The price used on the OEP report is generated by averaging the price data provided by several wood pellet providers in the state.
The OEP also offers a heating cost calculator that allows a user to calculate the least expensive way to heat a home while also giving the user a better understanding “as to the most economical way to heat your hot water and dry your clothes,” according to the OEP. The calculator shows that using wood pellets provides 80 percent efficiency rates, compared to coal, No. 2 fuel oil or natural gas that all plateau at a 78 percent efficiency rate. The price per million Btu for wood pellets is roughly $18.03, while coal equals $16.98, fuel oil $35.78 and natural gas $13.85.
In Maine, the price per ton of wood pellets for the week of January 30 totaled $236, but more importantly, the Maine Governor’s Office of Energy Independence and Security (OEIS) outlined the current geopolitical landscape conflicts that might affect home heating costs and consumers in the Northeast region that remains dependent on fuel oil.
“Heating oil prices remained relatively flat,” said OEIS Director Ken Fletcher, for the week of January 30, 2012. “While a potential European Union embargo on Iranian oil and continued threats by Iran to block a key crude oil shipment route hung over the geopolitical scene.” He added that about one-fifth of the global supply of crude oil is shipped through the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf and any blockade in this area could raise tensions, disrupt world oil supplies and push heating oil prices higher, especially as winter demand rises.

press release
Feb. 6, 2012, 6:00 a.m. EST
ENVIVA, E.ON SIGN MULTI-YEAR BIOMASS SUPPLY CONTRACT

WASHINGTON, Feb. 6, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Enviva LP ("Enviva"), a leading manufacturer of processed biomass fuel in the United States and Europe, and E.ON, one of the world's largest investor-owned utilities, today announced a multi-year 240,000 metric ton per year wood pellet supply agreement.
"Demand for clean, renewable resources like our sustainably produced wood pellets continues to grow as energy generators invest in alternatives to traditional fossil fuels," said John Keppler, chairman and CEO of Enviva. "Our partnership with E.ON reinforces the economic and environmental benefits achievable from renewable biomass resources in energy production."
"Strong agreements with companies like Enviva that are focused on growing biomass supply and share our views on the importance of promoting sustainability are essential for us to invest in biomass generation," said Jan Groeneveld, manager biomass sourcing at E.ON. "Biomass is one of the lowest-cost renewable solutions available and is a key part of helping us ensure that the lights stay on at a price that is affordable while helping to protect the climate."
The contract begins in early 2013. Enviva will supply the wood pellets from its facilities in the Southeastern U.S., home to some of the world's most abundant and sustainably managed wood baskets.
About Enviva
Enviva's mission is to become the preferred partner and supplier of sustainably sourced wood pellets and other processed biomass to serve power generation and industrial customers seeking to decrease their dependence on fossil fuels and reduce their carbon footprint. Enviva has been supplying wood chips and wood pellets to customers in the United States and Europe since 2007. Enviva's operating facilities represent more than 750,000 metric tons of annual production capacity, and the company has announced plans to build an additional one million metric tons of capacity in the mid-Atlantic region. For more information about Enviva, including job opportunities, go to www.envivabiomass.com .
About E.ON
E.ON is one of the world's largest investor-owned power and gas companies, with annual sales of more than 92 billion Euros and about 85,000 employees. E.ON plays a leading role in the development of the renewable industry worldwide and is already active in onshore and offshore wind technology, concentrating solar power (CSP), photovoltaic and biomass. E.ON currently operates over 8 GW of renewable capacity including large hydro and will invest another 7 billion Euros in renewable generation and climate protection projects over the next five years. E.ON has been named Green Energy Generator of the Year at the 2011 Platts Global Energy Awards. For more information about E.ON, go to www.eon.com .
Enviva Contact: Elizabeth Woodworth+1 (301) 657 5560 x 170elizabeth.woodworth@envivabiomass.com
E.ON Contact: Scott Somerville+44 (2476) 183 438 scott.somerville@eon-uk.com
SOURCE Enviva LP
Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved


press release
Feb. 6, 2012, 10:01 p.m. EST
VIRIDIS ENERGY COMPLETES ACQUISITION OF NOVA SCOTIA WOOD PELLET MANUFACTURER
Acquisition adds 110,000 tonne wood pellet production on East Coast for Viridis

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, Feb 06, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Viridis Energy Inc. ("Viridis" or the "Company") CA:VRD -2.86% (otcqx:VRDSF), announced today that it has completed the acquisition of certain assets of Enligna Canada Inc., a wood pellet mill operator located in Upper Musquodoboit, Nova Scotia.The assets were purchased from Enligna's Receiver by 3260526 Nova Scotia Limited, a new,wholly owned subsidiary of Viridis (the "Subsidiary").
The acquired assets include 20 buildings on four properties with a total of 157 acres and a separate 22 acre wood lot. The facilities house five pellet presses with the capacity to produce 110,000 tonnes of wood pellets, annually, and is the largest wood pellet manufacturing plant in Atlantic Canada. In addition, Enligna has an established reputation with customers in Europe and key relationships with raw material suppliers.
The Subsidiary obtained a $2.5 million short-term bridge loan (the "Loan") to fund the acquisition. The Loan carries an interest rate of 6% per annum and is repayable onor before March 31, 2012. The Loan is secured by a demand mortgage charging the Subsidiary's assets, as well as secured guarantees granted by Viridis and Okanagan Pellet Company Inc., another wholly owned subsidiary of the Company. The Company intends to repay the Loanusing a more permanent source of funds, the negotiations for which are currently underway.
"We are acquiring a turnkey-ready operation with a skilled workforce on the East Coast of the continent where wood pellet use is highest, not to mention the proximity to seaports for exporting to our European customer base. The business community has been verysupportive of Viridis to date, and we look forward to creating jobs and helping enhance the local economy," said Christopher Robertson, Viridis' chief executive officer, commenting on the acquisition. "We anticipate this acquisition will reduce our final cost of goods delivered to both our East Coast customers as well as our growing industrial customer base throughout Europe. The demand for wood pellets as a fuel source for power generation has expanded overseas in response to government policies requiring renewable energy sources to represent an increasing percent of energy consumption."
Mr. Robertson added, "We expect the plant to be fully operational later this quarter and will resume business as Scotia Atlantic Biomass Company."
About Viridis Energy Inc.
Viridis Energy Inc. CA:VRD -2.86% is a publicly traded, "Cleantech" alternative energy company specializing in the agricultural and wood waste biomass. Headquartered in Vancouver, B.C., Viridis Energy operates Cypress Pacific Marketing, Okanagan Pellet Company and Scotia Atlantic Biomass Companyfocusing on the marketing, distribution and manufacturing of wood pellets and other renewable biomass. For more information on Viridis Energy Inc. please refer to the company website at www.viridisenergy.ca .


ENVIVA SIGNS WOOD PELLET SUPPLY AGREEMENT WITH E.ON
Published on February 7, 2012 at 1:46 AM
By Cameron Chai
Enviva, one of the leading manufacturers of processed biomass fuel in the form of 100% wood pellets in the U.S. and Europe, has entered into a multi-year contract with E.ON, an investor-owned power and gas company, to supply 240,000 metric tonnes of wood pellet per year.
The deal between the companies commences in early 2013 and Enviva will deliver the renewable wood pellets from its Southeastern US plants.
John Keppler, Enviva’s Chairman and CEO, remarked that demand for clean and renewable biomass resources similar to their sustainably sourced wood pellets is continuously growing. The reason for this increased demand is energy producers make investment in efficient alternatives to conventional fossil fuels. The collaboration of both companies enhances the environmental and economical benefits attained from renewable biomass resources used in the production of energy.
Biomass is one of the cheapest renewable sources available in the market. E.ON’s Manager Biomass Sourcing, Jan Groeneveld noted that collaborating with firms like Enviva, who focuses on increasing biomass supply, will help the company to promote sustainability and to invest in renewable biomass generation. E.ON plays a major role in the growth of the global renewable industry and it is currently active in biomass, photovoltaic, concentrating solar power (CSP) and onshore and offshore wind technology.


APX –ENDEX WOOD PELLET EXCHANGE HAS COLD START
Published on 01/30/2012

November last year, APX-Endex in cooperation with the Port of Rotterdam launched a new market; the biomass renewable energy exchange.
The first contract listed on this exchange is an industrial wood pellets contract. Rotterdam was chosen for its proximity to key wood pellet consumers in Germany, its accessibility for US exporters, and the ambition of the port of Rotterdam to advance its status as an energy trading hub.
Already in 2008, APX-Endex started publishing an industrial wood pellets index, for which the pricing panel now has 13 members. This index should bring price transparency to an opaque, regionally fragmented market.
Different opinions among market players
The biomass exchange will be launched in two phases. During the first current phase trades will not go through a clearing house and physical settlement is arranged bilaterally by counterparties. Phase two, scheduled to take place during the course of 2012, will include the development and implementation of clearing services for wood pellets contracts.
Talking to several market insiders we learned that they are quite pleased with the index that is published by APX-Endex, because that provides so much needed transparency to the market. About the trading side they were not that outspoken. Although there were orders on the screen, no trades were done yet. Also on the underlying OTC market there were only a few transactions established lately. A spokes woman of the APX –Endex, told Maycroft that they remain optimistic as there is an increased interest from the market participants since the launch of the exchange. They are therefore confident that trading will pick up.
Some market players told us that they expect trading to take off once the clearing will be introduced. Others did have a different opinion. A biomass trader of an European utility, for instance, is of the opinion that the introduction of Clearing is not going to be a game changer. He believes that for trading to take off first a standard contract like the one made up by EFET for power and gas need to be developed. On top of that also the sustainability annex/criteria need to be standardized. Once that is established, market making should be offered via Trayport, where APX-Endex should act as the broker. First after that clearing should be introduced.
European wood pellet market
Looking at the market fundamentals and its future outlook one could identify some interesting features. Today the bulk of the demand for wood pellets comes from Europe, because the European Union has rules requiring member countries to generate 20% of their electricity from renewable sources by 2020.
But a big hurdle to the development of pan-European renewable product markets is the lack of a common approach among the EU Member States. As a result there exist sharply differing regulatory frameworks, government incentives and local laws across Europe today. Besides today there are only 7 big buyers in Europe, mainly utilities. That number does not look sufficient to get a liquid wood pellet trading market on both the OTC as well as the APX-Endex market.
Global wood pellet market
There are several experts who have expressed their concerns whether there exist enough resources to cover an increasing demand and managing of the trading of wood pellets in a sustainable way. Because it is not only in Europe the market develops. New market areas are starting to develop and large potential users like Brazil, Argentina, Chile and New Zealand are set to become significant players in the global wood pellet market in the near term. Further it seems fair to assume that Asian-Pacific countries like China, South Korea, Australia, India and Japan will become important actors as well in the next decade or so. Are these countries going to use the Rotterdam based Index as the benchmark in their contracts or will they develop a regional index?
The succes of the exchange depends on the market players
As for most new contracts liquidity will be key and as is described above it remains to be seen whether that will happen to the APX-Endex wood pellet market. There is a historic lesson that could be learned from an earlier initiative between an exchange and the Rotterdam Harbour trading community; the failed attempt to launch an Oil futures market in Rotterdam at the end of the eighties of the last century. That exchange, called the ROEFEX, was a joint venture between the Amsterdam Options Exchange ( now part of NYSE-Euronext) and the Rotterdam Oil Trading community and was forced to close its doors within 2 years after its launch. The Rotterdam oil traders thought that because Rotterdam was and still is the oil trading hub in Europe that they should also facilitate for a futures exchange.
That was a misconception as - despite the interest shown by many important market players -, they were never able to attract enough liquidity to make the exchange a success. Although the reason for the lack of liquidity looks different than that of the wood pellet market. The ROEFEX was in fierce competition with the already successful and liquid IPE (now ICE Futures) in London. However, the main lesson that could be learned was that it is the market players who finally decide whether they will use an exchange and its contracts yes or no. They will only use it when there is sufficient liquidity to ensure an efficient market with the best prices.
The biomass exchange can be a vital first step
That seems to be the big challenge to the APX-Endex. The wood pellet exchange is also a joint initiative between an exchange, the APX-Endex and the Rotterdam Harbour. The Rotterdam companies backing the new initiative are very active in the physical trading of the wood pellets. The question is whether they make the same mistake in their way of thinking as their oil peers 25 years ago or that it is based on real good market fundamentals analysis.
Or should we look at this initiative in the way as expressed by Bert den Ouden , CEO of APX-Endex: "The bottom line is, let's finally start creating a market for renewables. If we want to realise all those targets for renewables in Europe, we should do away with a fragmented market, with preferences for different types of renewables, different subsidies, etc. We should create a unified market and do it in the most cost-effective way. If our biomass exchange can be a first stimulus for that, then I think it has served its purpose." Only time will tell.

Interested to learn more about the wood pellet market fundamentals please go to our Market Intelligence section and learn how we could produce a report for you, or contact Kasper Walet.
NEW OWNERS SET TO FIRE UP PELLET PLANT
Wood pellet production is returning to Upper Musquodoboit and the Port of Halifax will be among the beneficiaries.
Viridis Energy Inc. of Vancouver plans to regularly ship 25,000-metric-tonne loads of wood pellets through the Port of Halifax in a deal announced Tuesday.
Viridis has completed the acquisition of some assets of bankrupt Enligna Canada Inc. and is embarking right away with a transition plan that will see hiring begin within weeks and an immediate resumption of business, as Scotia Atlantic Biomass Co., chief financial officer Michele Rebiere said in an interview.
“This is a significant development for the Upper Musquodoboit area ... and also for the Port of Halifax,” said Rebiere.
The regular, 25,000-metric-tonne shipments to a European customer reflect the plan to focus on bulk shipments of pellets to larger industrial customers in Europe where utilities use pellets for energy generation, she said. A shipment of this size fills the hold of an ocean-going bulk carrier.
“Just to put this into perspective, the previous owners of the plant were moving 6,000-metric-tonne shipments at a time,” she said.
The plant’s previous owners had a good business model that was unfortunately derailed by economic developments in Europe that were beyond their control, Rebiere said. The business went into receivership in August 2011.
Scotia Atlantic Biomass will hold a job fair in a couple of weeks as part of its plan to hire about 25 workers to begin the process of resuming production at the plant.
As many as 60 people could be working at the location in two shifts by spring when the plant is operating at full capacity.
Rebiere said Scotia Atlantic has a lot of logistical work to contend with in the coming weeks to get the mill up and running, and in arranging for required materials and shipping of the finished product to Halifax.
Halifax Grain Elevator Ltd.will play a crucial role in the success of the effort to access overseas markets by storing and handling the pellets.
“We’re especially impressed with the automated system recently installed at the Halifax Grain Elevators that allow for rapid unloading of loads at the location,” Rebiere said.
Scotia Atlantic Biomass does not have any immediately plans to get into the consumer side of the wood pellet business in Atlantic Canada, but will likely pursue this market at a later date, Rebier said.
“This is a significant part of our business across Canada so it’s likely something we’ll be looking at in Nova Scotia,” she said.
The assets of the former Enligna Canada mill were acquired through the receivership process for about $2.5 million. Viridis Energy and subsidiary Okanagan Pellet Company Inc. are contributing additional cash to get the plant up and running again, said Rebiere.
Viridis Energy CEO Christopher Robertson said the company is looking forward to creating jobs and contributing to the Nova Scotia economy.
“The demand for wood pellets as a fuel source for power generation has expanded overseas in response to government policies requiring renewable energy sources to represent an increasing percent of energy consumption,” Robertson said in a news release.


GARDINER SAVING ESTIMATE OF $195,000 WITH PELLETS
By Mechele Cooper mcooper@centralmaine.com
Staff Writer
GARDINER -- The city will save an estimated $195,000 in heating oil costs during the next 25 years with its new pellet boiler.
The boiler is expected to be running in a month or so.
Gardiner is the first municipality in Maine to use a wood pellet boiler system, according to the Maine Municipal Association.
The boiler, delivered to City Hall on Friday, is the second the city has bought in the last two years.
The city replaced the oil-fired boiler in the public works garage on Brunswick Avenue with a $75,000 pellet boiler in December 2009. The Eco Pellet Heating boiler for the garage was bought from Maine Energy Systems and installed by Heutz Oil Co..
The city got a $61,000 grant for the $122,000 City Hall project as part of the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009.
City Manager Scott Morelli said the local match for the grant was $61,000, which was included in the 2011 municipal budget. The pellet boiler will replace City Hall's 40-year-old oil-fired boiler.
A 2009 study determined that the pellet boiler would pay for itself in just less than 17 years, based on purchase price, maintenance cost and average heating oil costs of $1.98 a gallon, Morelli said.
Because half the cost of the project was paid for with a grant, the city's actual return on the investment will occur in about 8 1/2 years, he said.
"The cost of oil is much higher than the $1.98 a gallon used in the 2009 study, thus reducing the return on investment by a few more years," Morelli said.
He said the alternative heating system will reduce the city's release of carbon dioxide entering the air.
Morelli said the boiler was manufactured in Bethel and the pellets are made and distributed in Maine.
Mechele Cooper -- 621-5663
mcooper@centralmaine.com


SPECIAL REPORT: WOOD PELLETS FUEL MAINE'S ECONOMY


STRONG, Maine -- A few years back when the price of heating oil surged, many Mainers flocked to a relatively unknown type of fuel alternative, wood pellets.
As little as five years ago, Maine had just one pellet-producing plant. Today, there are four with plans on the table to build more.
"I think it's very important that the money stays here," said Jeff Allen of Geneva Wood Fuels.
At the plant in Strong, virtually every cent this plant accounts for -- stays here.
Local loggers provide the wood, Mainers manufacture the pellets and unlike foreign oil, the energy these pellets produce fuels Maine's economy.
"Take what used to be a dollar's worth of oil. The minute you write the check, 85 cents left the state," said Tom Wood of the Maine Forest Service.
Wood oversees the more than $11 million federal stimulus program which, since 2009, has helped allow nearly two dozen schools and town office buildings across Maine convert from oil to pellet-burning heat systems.
"We will displace on an annual basis more than 700,000 gallons of heating oil through the one program," said Wood.
In fact, in Strong, three schools, including the elementary school, have just this year switched over.
"We're being able to shrink our energy line in our school budget and school budgets are going down," said Tim Sorel with SAD 58.
"The oil dealers are our friends," said Bill Bell, executive director of Maine Pellets Fuel Association.
Hardly what you might expect to hear from that association. But ultimately, he predicts as more Mainers make the move to pellets, many oil dealers will simply become fuel dealers.
"We're not seeking to put the oil dealers out of business because they will, just as many dealers are now doing, convert to pellets," said Bell.
At full capacity, Maine's four mills could produce some 400,000 tons of pellets a year, though currently they're running about half that.
Still, Geneva's manager believes the recession, a dip in oil prices and some warmer than normal winters have only temporarily stalled the huge demand from five years ago.
"When oil prices go up, people are interested; as they drop back down a little bit, people lose interest. But I think it's here to stay," said Allen.
Wood is convinced pellets are here to stay. He says he's seen the results statewide, money saved, money made and more than enough pellet-producing timber in Maine to sustain the industry for decades.
"It keeps the jobs local. It's a renewable clean, efficient energy source and it gets us off the oil bandwagon," said Wood.
Along with the pellet plant in Strong, pellets are produced in Ashland, Athens and Corinth.

Read more: http://www.wmtw.com/money/30410843/detail.html#ixzz1lttDESv5




GERMANY MAPS OUT FINANCING PLAN FOR RENEWABLE ENERGIES

February 7, 2012
Source: Germany Trade and Invest
Germany recently passed the 20 percent mark for renewable energy in the electricity mix. The federal KfW bank group has introduced a new plan to further accelerate this shift to renewables, with increases in multimillion euro business loans now available. As more renewable energy is generated, energy management and storage are also receiving increased focus. Germany Trade & Invest, together with representatives of Germany's six E-energy model regions, will be at this year's E-world from February 7-9 in Essen to highlight opportunities for international companies in these growing market segments.
"With such a large share of renewable energy in the mix, it is becoming more urgent to implement smart grid and storage technologies to balance the fluctuating supply. Germany is making an exceptional team effort to achieve our ambitious goals, with businesses, banks, researchers and the government all working together" said Heiko Staubitz, renewable energy expert at Germany Trade & Invest in Berlin.
The new KfW plan outlines efforts to ease the financial burden of a wide-ranging shift to renewable energy. Previously, loans were available to small businesses for their efforts to move to renewables, and these have been expanded to cover companies with annual revenue of up to 3 billion euro. At the same time, loans are available to support research and development of energy storage, transmission, production, and efficiency techniques with grants up to EUR 25 million, marking an increase.
In light of last year's decision to phase out nuclear power, Germany is further ramping up investments in renewable energy. Already, Germany features the world's strongest photovoltaic market, with nearly half of all global installations worldwide. In wind power, Germany leads Europe in total installations and is currently preparing for a major expansion in the offshore segment.
Germany Trade & Invest is the foreign trade and inward investment promotion agency of the Federal Republic of Germany. The organization advises foreign companies looking to expand their business activities in the German market. It provides information on foreign trade to German companies that seek to enter foreign markets.


USDA OFFICIAL VISITS CORINTH WOOD PELLET PLANT


CORINTH, Maine (NEWS CENTER) -- Maine's growing wood pellet industry has sparked the interest of some top officials with the United States Department of Agriculture.

Dallas Tonsager, the USDA Under Secretary of Rural Development got a tour of the Corinth Wood Pellets plant today from President and CEO George Soffron.

Prior to the tour Tonsager had a rountable discussion with Soffron and the heads of Maine's three other wood pellet manufacturers.

They pressed him about what they see as a bias in Washington towards wood biofuels when it comes to subsidies.

Tonsager did offer assurances that the USDA will help to grow the industry.

"I think there's some things we can do," said Tonsager. "We finance about one fourth of the homes in Maine and so we'll work with homeowners who might be interested in the equipment as we go along so that may be our piece of this. We may be able to finance the distribution system that they want to develop. My agency is equipped to do those kinds of ventures."

The USDA says it has provided about $1.4 million in subsidies so far to Maines four wood pellet manufacturers.

According to federal data, subsidies for wood biomass are far smaller than they are for other bio-fuels such as ethanol, but the public consumption of those fuels is also far smaller.





WAYS SOUGHT TO BOOST MAINE'S WOOD PELLET INDUSTRY

02/09/2012 Reported By: Jay Field
In Maine, where the high price of fuel oil combined with less federal assistance has left thousands of residents struggling to stay warm, the need for affordable home heating options has never been greater. One solution, argues a 2010 study, lies in the state's forests and at the four plants now producing wood pellets. But while biomass is growing in popularity, industry officials say it's still a largely undiscovered resource that's a long way from being utilized to its full potential.
Narrow plumes of smoke rise above the red, corrugated metal walls of a warehouse north of Bangor. The dump trucks arrive with payloads of wood reduced to chips in the forest. They dump them in piles---not far from a rotating cylinder that looks like a green tootsie roll.

George Soffron, who runs Corinth Wood Pellets, explains: "It's just like a clothes dryer."

Some of the wood chips, Soffron says, go into two 20-million BTU burners that crank out hot air that pulls the rest of the biomass through the dryer. "So it's like having a clothes dryer that burns socks to generate the heat to dry the other socks," he says.

The wood travels into the warehouse where it's converted and and pushed onto an interconnected maze of conveyor belts that end in a waterfall of bullet-shaped pellets, ready for bagging.

On its Web site, the Maine Pellet Fuels Association has this handy converter: You enter the amount of gallons of heating oil you use each winter and calculate what would happen if you switched over to a pellet boiler. A house that uses 1,000 gallons, for example, could potentially save more than $17,000 over 10 years.

The town of Gardiner will soon become the first municipality in the state to switch over to a pellet boiler, a move that will save nearly $200,000 in heating costs over the next 25 years. But despite the clear benefits of moving to pellets, industry officials say business isn't as robust as it could be.

Dutch Dresser's company, Maine Energy System, manufacturers boilers. "Folks just don't understand what's available, generally speaking," he says.

Dresser is sitting at a conference table with other industry leaders and a special guest: Dallas Tonsager is the Undersecretary for Rural Development at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. He's up from Washington to speak with Dresser, George Soffron and others about the state of the industry.

Soffron noted a recent man-on-the-street survey conducted by Dresser's company. "I watched the tapes of that and it brought me to tears because 9 out of 10 people, when they were asked what are the options for heating your home, would say oil, propane, natural gas if its around, which it isn't," he says.

The USDA has provided about $1.5 million in subsidies to the state's four pellet manufacturers. Some around the table asked Tonsager about the possibility of more federal support to raise public awareness. Robert Linkletter, with the Maine Woods Pellet Company, told Tonsager his business needed a system of silos to more easily distribute pellets across the state.

"We're currently delivering up to 150 miles one way to make sure that people who install central heating systems can get fuel," he says. "No one who calls gets refused fuel. Clearly that doesn't make money. But it doesn't advance the industry."

"So a distribution idea, how would you start? Would you form a group, get some private companies to develop distribution?" Tonsager asked.

Linkletter tells him he has a more than $6 million proposal that would put 10 distribution sites throughout Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. It's just one of many ideas Tonsager drove away from the plant with.





CAN AN AUTOMATIC, PELLET BOILER LURE CONSUMERS AWAY FROM HEATING OIL?



Peter Canning of Berlin figures he'll save enough on heating in three years to recoup the $5,000 his new boiler cost. He's participating in the Model Neighborhood Project.
Chris Jensen for NHPR
By Chris Jensen
• Listen
A pilot project in Berlin is helping homeowners get sophisticated boilers that are automatically fed wood pellets.
The idea is to persuade people throughout the region that they can save money and say goodbye to oil while bolstering the region’s forest economy.
NHPR’s Chris Jensen reports.

Peter Canning is in basement of his home on a hillside overlooking Berlin.
He’s showing off his new wood-pellet boiler.
“You can open up down in the bottom here. I can show you how the pellets come in if you want to kneel down here and take a peek.”
But this is no ordinary pellet boiler, it’s self-feeding, and even the ash automatically collects in a bin so it can be easily emptied.
It is made by an Austrian company called OkoFEN.
And it’s not cheap.
Canning was able to get one because he is participating in a pilot program in Berlin that heavily subsidized the $18,000 cost.
“With the rebates and all that I received I paid about a little over $5,000 for the boiler. I think the rebates are tremendous and we’re looking at starting to save money now.”
One of those rebates came from a state program using federal stimulus funds.
It was expected to end Feb. 15th. But it is continuing and is offering up to $6,000 to consumers anywhere in the state who buy any brand of bulk-fed, pellet boilers.
But Canning got most of the help by participating in the Model Neighborhood Project.
For that project the City of Berlin has partnered with the Northern Forest Center, Berlin BetterBuildings, and Maine Energy Systems, which imports and assembles the OkoFEN boilers.
The project –which aims to help 40 homeowners - is getting much of its money from tax credits as well as grants.
But the hope for such boilers goes far beyond Canning’s tidy basement.
The hope is that such systems will catch on throughout the region, boosting the economy by replacing oil with a renewable resource – wood pellets.
Mike Wilson is with the Northern Forest Center, the project’s major backer. The Center promotes sustainable forestry.
“Right now the Northern forest states, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and New York, spend about $6 billion a year on fossil fuels and 78 cents out of every dollar we spend leaves the regional economy.”
If more homeowners used wood pellets, those dollars would stay in the region.
But moving beyond the first 40 homeowners and into widespread adoption of these sophisticated, bulk-fed units is the challenge.
Eric Kingsley is an analyst with Innovative Natural Resource Solutions, which sometimes consults with the forest industry.
“The pellet boilers tend to be a higher, up front cost than a comparable oil boiler. So there is a capital hurdle.”
The units are sold and maintained by companies trained by Maine Energy Systems.
The least expensive residential OkoFEN is about $11,000, but installation and a storage bin could easily add $6,000.
The Northern Forest Center said it picked the pricey OkoFEN because it was “the most seamless” replacement for an oil unit.
Kingsley says another challenge is the delivery of wood pellets.
“There is a little bit of a chicken and egg dilemma at this point.”
Kingsley says distributors don’t want to invest in equipment because there aren’t a lot of customers.
But customers are nervous about getting deliveries and they don’t want to buy the boilers.
Owners can buy the premium-grade pellets from several companies, but Dutch Dresser, who runs Maine Energy Systems, also sells them.
To encourage OkoFEN sales he says he won’t charge for delivery even to a distant homeowner.
Dresser is also promising OkoFEN purchasers he’ll keep the price of the pellets the same for three years.
“It is $239 a ton which is the equivalent of oil at $1.99 a gallon.”
He says a ton of premium pellets equals the energy in about 120 gallons of oil.
Dresser says he has sold more OkoFENs for commercial use than residences. He thinks that will change, particularly if there is a spike in the price of oil.
But even if there is a big increase in the demand for pellets analyst Kingsley says the region can easily handle it.
It will take some time to tell whether the region is ready to give up oil for wood pellets, something the forestry industry would love.
But back in Berlin Peter Canning plans to save a lot of money.
It is estimated heating with pellets costs about 40 percent less than heating with oil.
And the Model Neighborhood Program is looking for 35 more participants.
For NHPR News this is Chris Jensen.
NEW FROM THE JERSEY SHORE: HIGH OCTANE BIOFUEL
By David Worthington | February 13, 2012, 8:27 PM PST

A sample of Primus Green Energy's high-octane gasoline.
A start-up sited near the Jersey Shore could soon be producing even more energy than rowdy twentysomethings partying down at the boardwalk by converting tons of wood pellets and grasses into high-octane gasoline.
Primus Green Energy (PGE) is ramping up to build a plant that would turn out over 75 million gallons of biofuel per year. PGE’s facility would be profitable at $60 per barrel of oil, and would be a sustainable domestic source of gasoline, the company says.
75 million gallons is enough energy to keep 10,000 people driving 21 miles per day, said vice president of business development George Boyajian. Making that much biofuel would also involve accumulating 530 tons of biomass annually.
PGE chose wood pellets as its feedstock due to their high BTU content, consistency, and long-term availability, Boyajian said. The pellets would also be sourced domestically in the United States. It will eventually shift to using miscanthus grass.
European power companies are driving demand for wood pellets as a replacement for coal, and lumber mills are responding to slumping housing starts in the U.S by diversifying into the energy industry. There are currently 7 suppliers throughout several regions of the U.S., Boyajian noted.

The PGE biofuel process. (Image Credit: Primus Green Energy)
PGE’s process begins by taking wood pellet, or miscanthus grass, in their peptized form and introducing the feedstock into a gasifier (see the diagram to the right).
That step yields a syngas with higher than normal octane ratio, which is then treated in a commercial scrubber. The syngas is lastly synthesized into gasoline using an off the shelf catalyst. That process, however, is proprietary.
Other byproducts could include jet fuel and plastics, but fuel will build the company. Oil companies are buying up the biofuel to meet the U.S. government’s cellulosic ethanol requirement, Boyajian explained. They are currently being fined millions for not buying it as mandated under the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act.
Uncle Sam will continue to collect - at least for the time being. PGE will require a $500M investment to scale to 75 million gallons annual capacity, and it would take a few years to build a plant. A plant could be online as soon as 2013.
PGE’s Boyajian noted that the Pearl GTL (gas to liquids) facility in Qatar has cost over $19 billion to build, and said that PGE’s process is a “drop in the bucket” in comparison.
In the near term, PGE will be opening a continuous demo facility in Q4. Its initial output will be 30L per hour, or a barrel of gasoline every five hours. Engineering giant Betchel is PGE’s contractor, and it has already broken ground.
Israel Corp.’s IC Green Energy had invested over US$40M into PGE, and PGE anticipates that it will take at least another $40M in its next round after its capital expenses are proven out, Boyajian said. It currently has 40 employees.

CHEAPER THAN OIL, PROPANE, BUT NOT NATURAL GAS
By DAVID BROOKS
Staff Writer






CONCORD – In a sign of continuing inroads made by wood pellets in the state, their price is now being tracked by the New Hampshire Office of Energy and Planning, alongside traditional heating fuel sources such as oil, natural gas and propane.
The information about average statewide costs for bulk-delivered fuels is derived from a survey of five companies providing bulk pellet delivery service in New Hampshire. It shows that wood pellets are far cheaper than heating by heating oil or propane, although more expensive than natural gas.
This week, 1 million BTU’s of heat cost: natural gas ($13.50), cord wood ($17.50), wood pellets ($18.03), No. 2 heating oil ($34.97), kerosene ($39.56), electricity ($41.50) and propane ($46.86).
Pellets are made from compressed sawdust. Their uniform size and shape allows their delivery into a furnace to be automated, as compared to logs, so that heating can be controlled by thermostats, as with fossil fuels.
Although best known as a source for individual stoves, pellets or a similar product, wood chips, can be fed by augers into whole-house boilers or industrial-sized machines that can heat schools or factories.
The region’s biomass producers say pellets and wood chips could ultimately provide up to 20 percent of New Hampshire’s heat, compared to the current figure of about 4 percent.
The industry claims that nearly 5 percent of New Hampshire homes heat with wood pellets or other renewable energy. Heating uses nearly 40 percent of New Hampshire’s energy.
The federal Stimulus Funds Rebate Program is kick-starting the switch to wood pellet central heating in homes by offering rebates of up to 30 percent or up to $6,000 of installed cost for systems for primary residences.
Information about the residential wood pellet rebate program is on the Public Utilities Commission website: www.puc.nh.gov.
David Brooks can be reached at 594-6531 or dbrooks@nashuatelegraph.com.


WHAT IS HAPPENING IN RUSSIAN BIOFUEL INDUSTRY?


At the recent conference on bioenergy in Moscow the participants from Russia and European countries were discussing a number of important issues.
The agenda was viability and profitability of production of bioproducts. The interest was unfolding in the initiative of small and medium-sized businesses, in the amount of investment and number of large enterprises in the market of alternative energy.
All participants agreed that the active role of alternative energy gradually fades away. Thus, over the past 10 years the number of alternative investments in the economy has increased by almost 20 times. However, the expectations of investors are likely to be only partially met.
One of the largest factories for the production of biomass is located in a small village of the Leningrad Region. Many businesses either close or launch another activity. Why is this happening? Experts note that there are several reasons: illogic business plans, too high price for the products, technical problems, etc.
Many people wonder about the future of the market of pellets, briquettes and biogas. The specialists say that by 2020 the market for alternative fuels will increase by 30 million tons, compared with 15 million tons in 2010. The most profitable business is the production of wood pellets and briquettes. Cheap raw materials, demand for it inside the country and abroad makes production of these biofuel popular. The reconstruction of the existing heating systems for the use of biofuel is also needed.



SLC OFFICIALS BEGIN TALKS ON ALTERNATIVES TO NATURAL GAS
By BOB BECKSTEAD
JOHNSON NEWSPAPERS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2012
ARTICLE OPTIONS

BRASHER FALLS — St. Lawrence Central School officials are beginning to discuss alternatives in case the plan to convert from heating oil to natural gas falls through.
District taxpayers in December had approved an $8.2 million capital project that would allow the district to make the conversion after the new St. Lawrence Gas line went by the district during its expansion into Franklin County. But the St. Lawrence Gas project has now been delayed.
Plans call for a 48-mile natural gas pipeline to stretch from Norfolk to the village of Chateaugay in Franklin County, passing by the school district along the way. But construction initially scheduled to start in June 2011 has been pushed back again because of an unanticipated increase in construction costs. St. Lawrence Gas officials had originally expected to spend $9.2 million for the work, but now expect to pay double what originally was allocated for the construction.
While St. Lawrence Central School officials wait to see what will happen, they’re talking about other options in case the project doesn’t go as planned.
“I have been in fairly constant contact with St. Lawrence Gas,” Superintendent Stephen M. Putman said, noting company officials were “still cautiously optimistic” about moving ahead.
He said the board of directors for St. Lawrence Gas is expected to meet in late February or early March and could make their decision about the project then.
Meanwhile, Mr. Putman said, they continue to meet with the district’s architects and engineers to look at other possibilities if the natural gas project doesn’t come through as planned.
“Heating is a big issue,” he said.
He noted the cost of fuel oil is $33.25 per 1 million BTUs, while natural gas is $17.50, wood pellets is $18.86 and LP gas is $37.75.
While they had explored converting to wood chips, that plan was rejected because “the cost of constructing a wood chip heating plant is much greater than the cost of natural gas,” Mr. Putman said.
With wood pellets, however, the cost of construction is less, as are ongoing maintenance expenses compared to wood chips, according to the superintendent.
The district could also explore energy performance contracts, which it has done in the past, he said.
“I think it’s still important that we moved forward with energy savings in heating. I would prefer it be natural gas,” Mr. Putman said.
As part of the capital project, district officials had planned to remove 1950s-era steam lines and heating units in the original building and replace them with more energy-efficient hot water units.
Diesel electric generators will also be replaced with a natural gas electric generator that will be used for “peak shaving” of electricity demand when school is in session, and can also be used as an emergency generator.
The project will also allow the school to replace its current electrical panels, which are so old that repair parts are hard to find.
District officials also hope to see energy conservation through improvements made to the pool area at the elementary school. New dehumidification equipment will be installed that will use much less energy, and warmth from the air in the pool room will be captured and used to heat the pool. The project will also address maintenance issues, such as pipes, pumps and filters that are at the end of their useful life.
All kitchen appliances will also be converted to natural gas, saving the district more money.
The district had envisioned submitting its plans to the state Education Department in two phases for approval. The first phase would strictly deal with the conversion to natural gas in an effort to meet the next heating season.
“I’m hopeful by the March board meeting I’ll have something permanent. I’m not quite as concerned about the timeline now,” Mr. Putman said.
FIRE DAMAGES WOOD PELLET MILL IN STRONG
By David Robinson drobinson@onlinesentinel.com
Staff Writer, Morning Sentinel
STRONG -- A wood pellet mill is expected to reopen in the next few days after a fire broke out early Thursday morning and damaged the plant, where 21 people work.

click image to enlarge
FIRE IN STRONG: Workers watch as smoke billows from the Geneva Wood Fuels plant on Thursday morning. A fire started on the third floor about 8 a.m. and the wood pellet mill, where 21 people work, is expected to reopen in the next few days, company officials said.
Staff photo by David Robinson
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Travis Viles was working alongside another man inside the Geneva Wood Fuels plant when they noticed hot embers falling from the ceiling about 8 a.m., just before smoke began filling the room where the men were bagging wood pellets.
They alerted other workers and the 10 employees ran out of the building on Norton Hill Road to safety. Emergency responders started to arrive shortly after the evacuation and several firetrucks, including two ladder trucks from area fire departments, were called to the scene.
Viles watched as firefighters scrambled up ladders, cutting holes into the building's façade and dousing flames shooting from the roof of the plant where he has worked for five months.
Other plant workers stood nearby and silently watched as smoke billowed from the plant, which is across the street from a store, gas station and the town's community center.
Viles, 18, believes the plant has been vital in keeping people in town, calling it the first "real job" he was able to find. He shared his fear of finding another job.
"I was just getting started," Viles said.
About 50 firefighters from area departments responded to the scene, with fire hose teams working on the roof, inside the plant and from ladder trucks to extinguish the fire by around 10:30 a.m., Strong Fire Chief Duayne Boyd said.
Geneva Wood Fuels, the company that owns the pellet mill, planned to start its cleanup and repair work Thursday night at the plant, where fire damage was mostly contained to the roof. The plant's equipment is expected to keep producing pellets for its hundreds of customers throughout New England, a company official said.
The State Fire Marshal's Office is investigating to determine what caused the fire, which is not considered suspicious. Investigators believe the fire started in an empty storage section of the plant that was built after an explosion at the pellet mill in 2009, Boyd said.
The explosion in August 2009 closed the plant for almost a year and Geneva Wood Fuels made a variety of safety precautions after the incident, according to Justin Moran, director of sales and marketing for the company.
Moran would not discuss details of the explosion, saying the company's chief executive officer Jonathan Kahn will be available Monday for further comment on the issue.
The company paid a $15,000 for workplace safety violation citations issued after the 2009 explosion, according to the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
William Coffin, the federal labor agency's area director in Maine, said Thursday that the violations were addressed and fixed after the company worked with the agency's investigators. The federal agency initially sought $27,000 in fines from the company before agreeing to the lower penalty, he said.
Moran wrote in an email that the plant implemented the safety precautions recommended by the federal agency and an independent fire safety consultant. He added that the company believes its fire safety systems and policies are state-of-the-art compared to other facilities in the wood pellet industry.
The company plans to conduct an internal review of Thursday's fire. The review seeks to determine a cause and find "ways to be even better prepared for incidents like this in the future," Kahn wrote in a prepared statement.
David Robinson -- 861-9287
FURNACE SYSTEM COULD BOOST PELLET INDUSTRY IN U.S.
By Lisa Gibson | February 23, 2012




Advanced Bio Heat Co. has developed a wood pellet-fired forced-air furnace that offers more than eight times the British thermal units of typical forced-air furnaces sold in the U.S., according to the company. Advanced Bio Heat expects the system to bolster wood pellet markets and boost business by supplying mills with a steady requirement for stocking inventory during the summer months.
The furnace, designed with the help of WoodMaster Manufacturing Co. in Red Lake Falls, Minn., ranges from 450,000 to 850,000 Btu, compared with the 100,000 Btu available in the U.S. today, according to Advanced Bio Heat. Many furnaces require heat exchangers using hot water piping converted to forced air, but the new system is capable of producing heated air volumes directly in the appliance and blowing the air into the ducting. The system also includes low-profile feedstock hopper modules that can store 8,000 pounds each of wood pellets. The modules consist of a small steel bin on the bottom and a 1-ton super sack in the upper bin.
“It builds very quickly a market for us during the slow time in the summer, stocking customer’s inventories,” said Jerry Brown, marketing and sales manager for Wisconsin-based pellet producer Great Lakes Renewable Energy. “Our local objective is the agricultural growing barns.” The wood pellet industry can tag along with the furnace system’s development and create a high-quantity market, he added. “My intentions are to emphasize the customer get his supply during the summer with the easy-to-store super sack concept on-site for use during the winter months. If they wait until late fall they simply won't get the pellets while we’re answering the call for our residential premium market.”
Great Lakes Renewable Energy has been a supporter of the furnace, already supplying pellets to a similar but non forced-air unit at Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center in Finland, Minn. The first U.S. application of the large forced-air system will be developed in Becker, Minn. For more information on the system, click here.

THE POTENTIAL OF WOOD PELLET PRODUCTION IN EUROPE IS REALIZED ONLY BY 61%


The potential of wood pellet production in Europe is huge but it is realized only by 61%. According to the analysts, the performance capacity has increased by 3% last year compared to the previous year.
Among the most active countries which produce wood pellets in the EU are Italy, Germany, Sweden and Austria. At the end of last year there were produced 7.9 million tons of wood pellets in Europe.
Another major manufacturer and supplier of pellets is Russia with a total volume of 1.05 million tons of wood pellets per year.
Production capacities of the European countries (Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark and others) are great, but every year they import significant quantities of fuel pellets.
In 2011 the EU consumed about 11.4 million tons of wood pellets from its own reserves. The missing volumes were offset by foreign purchases.
Austria and Germany were able to meet the needs of the population and enterprises in pellets and the remainder were exported to other European countries.

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27 February 2012 Last updated at 09:07 ET

TILBURY POWER STATION BLAZES AS WOOD PELLETS CATCH FIRE

About 100 firefighters are tackling a severe blaze at the power station
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A huge blaze which broke out at a power station in Essex, in an area containing about 4,000 tonnes of wood pellets, is still being tackled by firefighters.
There was concern about the structure of the building at Tilbury Power Station, as water sprayed on the pellets was increasing their weight.
But firefighters have since gone into the heart of the blaze with foam spray to deprive the fire of oxygen.
Plant owners RWE power said: "All our employees have been accounted for."
'Hugely challenging'
Essex chief fire officer David Johnson said it was proving "physically and technically challenging" to bring the fire under control but this could be achieved by mid-afternoon,
"We were able to establish it (the building) was safe so we put a few crews in."
At the scene
Ben Ando BBC News
The smoke is clearing at Tilbury B power station in Essex.
Firefighters are increasingly confident that they are getting on top of a blaze in two of the large hoppers that feed biomass wood pellets into the furnace.
It's hot, dirty work and they need to wear breathing apparatus and protective suits. Visibility is also low.
Power station engineers are working with senior fire officers to decide the best way to tackle the blaze.
Normally they would use water but there were fears that the weight of water needed would cause the hoppers to collapse.
Nonetheless even when the fire is out it will take several days to clean up the burned out hopper and repair any damage caused.
They reported back on the conditions they found.
"We're applying specialist high-expansion foam which we hope will starve the fire of oxygen. This won't cause the structural problems that putting water on it would.
"It's very hot and it's very smoky in there and we still have fears for safety should the building collapse.
"Assuming our tactics work, the bulk of the fire should be extinguished within the next two or three hours.
"Then it's about whether the fuel is continuing to burn within the hoppers under the foam blanket - that could take anything up to about a day or two to extinguish.
"This is a hugely challenging fire. I've only been to another one of this kind once before in my 24-year career."
More than 120 firefighters, 15 fire engines, three aerial ladder platforms and a mass foam attack unit have been tackling the fire.
'No dangerous chemicals'
Extra fire crews were called in from London and further afield to deal with a separate unrelated fire in a wood pile on a nearby dockside.
Talking about the power station fire, witness Robert Richards told BBC Essex: "The whole of that north block just went completely up in flames.
"It was on two sides that I could see. My daughter could see it from the other side of the river."
Tilbury Power Station was built to burn coal but was recently granted consent to burn biomass fuel and wood materials.
Biomass plants burn wood pellets, generally made from compacted sawdust or other wastes.
Mr Johnson said it was too early to say what caused the blaze.
Firefighters said it was a technically challenging fire
"Thankfully nobody has been hurt," he said. "We initially believed there were personnel from the power station missing but all have been accounted for, so everyone is safe," he said.
"The smoke that's being given off is very similar to what you get from a bonfire, there are no dangerous chemicals involved, no pipes or liquids involved."
John Kent, leader of Thurrock Council, praised the efforts of fire crews.
"Because it's in the process of being converted [to biomass], there shouldn't be any lasting impact to the National Grid and no shortage of power as a result," he said.
"We just have to wait until the fire is under control and see what the situation is and how much damage has been done. "
'No idea'
Nigel Staves, power station manager said that it looked like only the north end of the power station was affected.
The power station has already begun an investigation into the cause of the fire, which is likely to last several weeks.
"Until we can actually get in to see the damage and understand what happened we have no idea how the fire started at the moment," Mr Staves said.
"The bunkers are very strong, made of strong steelwork, designed to hold 1,000 tonnes of coal.
"Until we can assess how many of the bunkers were on fire it will be difficult to say how much damage we have, but I'm hoping it is more superficial."
He hoped power could be generated from the unaffected south end of the site, possibly once the fire was out.
"It could be two or three days, it could be a week. It will depend on the investigation when we go in and see the damage," he said.
Tilbury supplies the National Grid with less than 1% of the total electricity production in the UK.
"As soon as we shut the power station down this morning, another power station was started to replace that energy. That will continue until we get Tilbury back on-line," Mr Staves said.
A "minimal" number of staff remain on site in the control room working alongside the firefighters.

WOOD STOVES LINKED TO TRACE LEVELS OF HEAVY METALS
Feb 28, 2012 5:01am
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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Preliminary findings from University of Southern Maine researchers have linked wood stoves and pellet stoves with potential indoor air quality problems.

The team of faculty and students began its work last spring, examining indoor airborne smoke and ash particles from firewood and wood pellets.
Researchers found traces of at least 10 heavy metals in wood and pellet ash, including copper, arsenic and lead. Joseph Staples, one of the principle investigators, says most of the particles were stirred up when cleaning out the ashes, not while the stove is in operation.
The health risks are uncertain. Staples says the exact numbers are difficult to quantify because little research has been conducted.



TILBURY POWER PLANT FIRE MAY HAVE STARTED ON CONVEYOR BELT

INVESTIGATORS believe the huge fire at Tilbury Power Station could have started on a conveyor belt.
The power station in Fort Road, which employees about 230 people, was out of action yesterday, and is likely to remain so for several days as firefighters continue their efforts to keep the smouldering fire under control.
It comes as the Environment Agency said it would investigate the cause of the fire at the plant and whether its operator had complied with the conditions of its environmental permit.

The blaze broke out in two biomass storage tanks – known as hoppers – at the power plant on Monday morning, but was brought under control by the late afternoon. More than 80 firefighters worked through the night to tackle the inferno using special foam, at what is the biggest biomass power station in Europe.
They also had to remove thousands of tonnes of wood pellets from the affected area.
RWE npower, operator of the power station, has launched an investigation, but initial reports suggested the fire could have broken out on a conveyor belt where woodchips are carried, before going into a vat to be burnt.
A spokesman said: “We have begun a full internal investigation to determine the cause of the incident and will be reviewing the extent of the damage to the station over the coming days.

“We just can’t speculate at the moment when production will begin again, but as soon as we can get in and assess the damage we will have a clear idea. But people should not be concerned there will be a power shortage.”
For around 40 minutes yesterday production resumed at the plant, but this was only to clear some of the clogged up hoppers and it was powered down soon afterwards.
Adam Eckley, Essex’s deputy chief fire officer, said his crews faced painstaking work overnight.
He said: “Operations overnight looked at moving the affected biomass out of those two bunkers away from the site, but it was frustratingly slow progress, unfortunately.
“It is expected it could take up to two days for the embers to be removed.”
At the height of the drama, more than 120 firefighters were involved in the operation while crowds of onlookers gathered along Tilbury and even Gravesend riversides to watch huge plumes of smoke rise hundreds of feet into the air above the station.
An Environment Agency spokesperson said the site’s environmental permit meant it had to have plans prepared for such emergencies, but would not comment any further as the cause of the fire is not yet known and its investigation has not begun.


HUD SECRETARY AGREES TO SEN. COLLINS’ REQUEST FOR NEW RULES FOR PELLET BOILERS
By Dawn Gagnon, BDN Staff
Posted March 02, 2012, at 8:46 p.m.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Under questioning Thursday by Sen. Susan Collins, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shawn Donovan agreed to update federal guidelines to classify wood pellet boilers as an “acceptable” primary heating source for the purpose of Federal Housing Authority financing.
Until now, HUD has not considered a wood pellet boiler system as a conventional primary heating source, which Collins says has made it hard for homeowners to obtain FHA financing and has discouraged homeowners from considering alternatives to heating systems that rely on fossil fuels.
“Maine is the most heavily dependent of any state in the nation on home heating oil,” Collins told Donovan. “When you see the spikes in oil prices we have seen this year — and the cutbacks in the LIHEAP — it is causing tremendous hardship for so many families.
“Many families are looking for reliable affordable alternatives. The wood pellet boiler industry is growing quickly and it has the potential to create thousands of new jobs in Maine,” Collins said.
Collins said wood pellet manufacturing, boiler technology and pellet delivery systems have progressed dramatically since the days of scooping pellets from a plastic bag into a small stove every couple of hours. Industry leaders indicate that newly developed pellet boiler systems can reliably maintain a constant level of heat in a home without direct human intervention.
To that end, she said, “It is appropriate for HUD to update its regulations and consider wood pellet boiler systems as an acceptable conventional heating source.”
Donovan said Collins was “absolutely right” and said HUD will update its rules based on the improved technology.
“There are moments when the federal government, and government in general, can be a little bit behind the cutting edge in terms of new technology,” he said. “I’m happy to report that wood pellet stoves are an acceptable heating system for homes under our insurance program as long as they meet the qualifications that any heating systems has to meet.”
The updated regulations can be seen at HUD’s website at http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=aprval.pdf.