Biomass Energy Holds Great Promise for Virginia

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Virginians need electricity. We need a lot of it. In recent years the Old Dominion Electric Cooperative's demand, for example, has increased more than twice the national average. Conservation and en ergy efficiency efforts continue to slow this trend, but are unlikely to be the entire solution.

This is not just a problem, it is also an opportunity. We can use this need for electricity as a way to create jobs and investment in Virginia, and revitalize our rural communities.

The solution is a series of regional, community-sized, biomass-powered facilities spread across the state. These plants would productively use both the electricity and heat they create through a technology called Combined Heat and Power (CHP).

Energy suppliers have traditionally met our needs through large fossil fuel plants (500-plus megawatts). In fact, the Old Dominion Electric Cooperative (ODEC) has a controversial proposal to build a new 1500-megawatt coal-fired generator in Surry. This model has provided us with reliable energy, but at a cost.

Due to their remote locations and large scale, these facilities cannot use the heat they generate, making them only 30 percent efficient. Such plants use energy and precious water to cool the excess steam. These traditional plants rely on fossil fuels that are costly and destructive to mine. The environmental concerns around burning these fuels are backed more and more by alarming scientific data.

This old model is out of date. There is a better way, and it begins on Virginia's farms and in her woodlands.

THE STRENGTH and ingenuity of Virginia farmers has always been part of our heritage. There was a time when much of the commonwealth's identity was defined by profitable crops such as tobacco and peanuts. But our rural communities are hurting, and have been for years. The growth of the wine industry is a lesson we can build upon. A new cash crop has created jobs, investment, tourism, and national attention. Biomass crops can do all this and more.

There is enough acreage in Virginia to produce crops -- primarily warm-season grasses -- that could power 30 biomass facilities of 50 megawatts each. Farmers could sign long-term contracts with energy providers, ensuring consistent income for the farm, reliable fuel for the energy provider, and stable costs for the energy customer. The annual woody residue left over from logging and milling could power an additional 14 biomass facilities of 50 MW each. This unique combination of crop potential and woody biomass reserves would provide Virginia with ample feedstock.

The technology for base-load biomass energy is commercially proven and growing more advanced every day. CHP technology allows for dramatically increased efficiency by capturing the thermal energy traditionally wasted in large fossil-fuel plants. Due to the small scale of community-sized facilities, the output would always match demand. In other words, there is no risk of energy customers paying the mortgage for unneeded capacity in a multi-billion dollar facility.

A BIOMASS energy economy would create thousands of jobs, bring millions of dollars into our rural communities, and position the commonwealth as a leader. Energy providers and customers would save untold dollars by profiting from increased efficiency. They also would avoid inevitable carbon pricing and be prepared to meet renewable-energy standards. Community-sized facilities using local, sustainable fuel would provide secure, reliable energy and provide a foundation for future economic development. Additionally, each plant should take up no more than five acres and would have great environmental benefits.

We have the need, the land, the farmers, the wood, and the political will; now the energy suppliers need to step up and lead us into a prosperous future. The state could start by putting biomass-powered CHP technology in its facilities, saving tax dollars and stimulating local economies. Richmond could get the ball rolling -- but the greatest opportunity today is with the ODEC. The co-op could supplant the need for the proposed 1500 MW coal facility by focusing on regional biomass plants with CHP technology.

This is an opportunity we cannot miss.


Curt Gleeson is the project director for Public Policy Virginia's Community Power Initiative. PPV is a Charlottesville-based advocacy group focused on climate change and rural development issues. Gleeson can be reached at .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by Derek on July 09, 2009 at 12:34 pm

Relying on Coal to create jobs is like relying on professions like VCR repair, Blacksmiths, and Cathode Ray tube makers. Coal pollutes the bay, limits our Job growth, and doesn’t’ even generate enough Jobs and Income to keep our Rest Stops open. We’ve got to move on if we are to advance and compete.

Create Jobs in Virginia by converting Coal Factories to burn Biomass created by Virginia Farmers. It will save and create thousands of Jobs and Hundreds of Millions in Tax revenue.

We need to invest in Biomass instead of Coal and require that all Coal burning plants be converted to Biomass. We have the resources, the farmers, the Climate and the Opportunity.

We have abundant and nearly unlimited technologies and fuel sources for producing home grown Biomass and Biofuels (if we can get past Coal Industry Obstructions). Read this “Clean Coal” article first for the latest trends and technologies:

Clean Coal: Here Now!

http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2009/05/clean-coal-here-now

Southern Alliance for Clean Energy (SACE) reports that Southern States have more than enough potential to get 25% by 2025 and 100% of its power from Local Renewable Energy resources at a price lower than Coal and Nuclear:

http://www.cleanenergy.org/index.php

We (the USA) is exporting hundreds of tons of Wood Pellets to Europe to burn in Coal plants (instead of keeping and using these energy resources at home in America):

Wood Pellets Catch Fire as Renewable Energy Source

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124691728110402383.html


Southern VA in particular has excellent supply potential for Biomass energy (instead of Coal).

http://www.virginiabiomass.org/

http://www1.eere.energy.gov/biomass/pdfs/nbap.pdf

http://www.virginiabiomass.org/Bioenergy-conf.html

By comparison, China and Europe are going full tilt boogie to be the world leaders in Biomass production. BioMass Plant Development in China and Europe:

http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2009/05/clean-coal-here-now

http://www.asien.um.dk/NR/rdonlyres/D49B2D23-2171-44D2-80A7-62F83040BD82/0/DevelopmentandmarketingofbiomassboilersinChinaDragonpower.pdf

http://www.techtp.com/recent papers/BO2-technology.pdf

http://www.NewEnergyAmerica.org

Converting all of Virginia’s Coal burning plants to burn Biomass instead represents one of the greatest opportunities for VA Jobs that has ever come along. We can create a future for Virginians that’s also solves a Global need. Remember: “You can get everything you want out of life, if you just help enough other people get what they want”. (Motivator Zig Ziglar)

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