Archive for the ‘Biomass’ Category

Renewable Electricity Surges by 32%–Provides 11% of U.S. Net Generation

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

Some good news, for a change. According to the latest “Monthly Electricity Review” issued by the U.S. Energy Information Administration:

Renewable energies, biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, and wind accounted for 11.0% of net U.S. electricity generation in June 2008 compared to 8.6% in June 2007.

Compared to June 2007, wind power grew by 81.6%, solar by and hydropower by 34.7%.

Renewable energy sources now account for 37% of the non-fossil net electricity generation in the United States.

We’re making progress. It takes some time, and it takes some work, but we’re making progress.

Xcel to Spearhead Midwest’s Largest Biomass Plant

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

America is making progress! According to Green Biz:

Wis. — Xcel Energy will invest as much as $70 million on a biomass power plant project in Wisconsin that will be the Midwest’s largest.

Two of the three boilers at the Bay Front Power Plant in Ashland, Wis., have been retrofitted to burn multiple fuels for power, including wood chips. Xcel’s proposal will convert the third coal-fired boiler to biomass gasification, enabling the plant to run completely on waste wood.

The power plant has burned nearly 4 million tons of waste wood into power since 1979. After the project, the plant will use as much as 450,000 tons of waste wood a year, compared to roughly 200,000 tons now.

The retrofit will allow the conversion of waste wood to synthetic gas, which is cleaner than coal. The project will reduce nitrogen oxides emissions by half, particulate matter by 90 percent and sulfur dioxides by more than 85 percent.

Biomass is a key form of clean energy. We are starting to see progress in this field. That’s good news.

I just wish it was in Oregon.

“She flies with her own wings.” Or does she? The chances are that the wings she is flying with were produced and are powered with fossil fuels that have been exported from another country.

We in Oregon need to continue to develope clean, affordable, and renewable energy sources.

Energy independence is achievable. It may take a while…but, of course, we’ve got to start somewhere.

If you have not yet signed our petition, make sure to do so.

New Hampshire biomass plant to be one of the biggest biomass power plants in North America

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

As reported by the Associated Press:

The plant would be one of the biggest biomass power plants in North America and would represent a shift from fossil-fuel power generation to a renewable resource.

Here at Lights on Oregon, we’re glad to see some progress. We just wish Oregon could be part of it. We want to shift from fossil fuels to renewable resources. We want to fundamentally improve America. We want to bring back affordable energy prices. We want to clean up the environment.

We want to achieve change.

Environmentalists vs. Alternative Energy

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

A local Oregon blog recently picked up on Lights on Oregon. This particular blogger leans to the right, however, regardless of political affiliation, he/she is right on:

As energy prices skyrocket, so does inflation. Our personal budgets, as well as our national economy, are shriveling up. While all Americans feel the pain of higher fuel prices, and most understand the correlation between energy prices and the inflation that’s eroding their buying power and chipping away at their standard of living, not nearly as many recognize the potential impact of energy dependence on national security. Much of the world’s oil is controlled by forces that are hostile to us. Our precarious energy position makes us very vulnerable.

We need to produce more energy at home. There are two reasons we aren’t doing that today. The first reason is the cost of R&D. The U.S. has a lot of shale oil, but it’s expensive to extract. However, with the prices of oil on the global market today, it’s getting to the point where the return will justify the investment. The other reason we aren’t producing more energy is counterproductive regulations and endless litigation brought about by environmental groups.

There may be enormous reserves of oil in ANWR, but we need to do exploratory drilling to find out where they are and assess how much oil there is. Environmentalists have stymied any attempt to do that, because it might disturb the polar bears. Other countries are taking full advantage of off-shore drilling but our government won’t permit that, because it might disturb the rich and powerful environmental lobbies that help our legislators get reelected.

The environmentalists claim they oppose drilling for oil because they favor alternative energy sources that are cleaner and safer for the environment. But it turns out that the greatest opposition to alternative energy production comes from environmental groups!

Wind power is about as clean as you can get. Environmentalists used to promote it but, once massive wind farms became a reality, environmentalist groups all over the country sprang up with injunctions and litigation to shut them down because of their impact on birds, bats, and even ground squirrels.

Hydroelectric power is another source of clean energy that environmentalists used to tout. But now they want to blow up dams, and have successfully lobbied and litigated to have dams removed, at tremendous taxpayer expense, because of their impact on fish habitats.

Natural gas burns cleaner, with lower emissions than petroleum products, and even the Sierra Club initially came out in favor of it. Yet, all over the country, wherever drilling for natural gas is undertaken, or a natural gas pipeline is proposed to be built, environmentalists rear up in litigation because of speculation about the potential harmful consequences of potential leaks.

Geothermal power is an interesting concept, because it’s clean and safe and permanent. It doesn’t vary with the weather, and it can never be depleted. Yet, the Sierra Club’s Juniper Group is litigating to prevent an exploratory project for development of a geothermal plant on a 5-acre parcel outside Oregon’s Newberry Crater, which is one of the most promising geothermal resources in the world. There is no specific threat to the environment or habitat of any particular species. They’re just concerned that having the project so close to a national monument might have a potential impact on forests or wildlife.

There are many more examples of environmentalists opposing alternative energy. But what does it all mean? They tout alternative energy until it starts to become a reality, and then they start backpedaling and litigating to thwart it. Is it just because they can’t accept the idea that any kind of energy production will necessarily entail environmental tradeoffs? Or is there some other agenda that motivates them to try to block every avenue of energy independence? I believe many of them are simply naive, and haven’t thought it through. But the consequences of their good intentions affect us all.

There’s a group in Oregon, called Lights On Oregon, that has launched a Campaign for Affordable and Reliable Energy (CARE) in our state. If you’re a resident of Oregon, you might want to consider signing the petition. If you’re not a resident of Oregon, you can contact the national headquarters of FreedomWorks to see if they have a project like Lights On Oregon in your state.

What do you think? I encourage you to drop by the blog and leave a comment with your thoughts.

Oregon has already had biomass success

Monday, September 8th, 2008

According to the State of Oregon website:

The state´s only municipal solid waste-to-energy facility is located near Brooks, Oregon, in Marion County. The facility, owned by Covanta Marion, Inc., has been operating since 1986. The combustion facility burns unprocessed municipal waste. It consists of two furnaces with a design capacity to burn 550 tons of waste per day. In 2004, the energy value of the municipal solid waste the facility consumed amounted to about 1.7 trillion Btu. The facility generated 99.2 million kilowatt-hours of electric energy.

Organic Waste Digesters
Animal manure digesters can be designed for individual farm operation or as centralized facilities. The Tillamook Digester Facility began operating in 2003. The digester converts manure from approximately 4000 dairy cows into electricity. In 2004, the facility generated about 1.3 million kilowatt-hours of electricity.

Portland General Electric (PGE) has built a small manure digester at CalGon Farms dairy in Polk County. It handles the manure from about 400 dairy cows and generated about 236,000 kilowatt-hours of electric energy in 2004.

Landfill Gas
Two landfills in Oregon generate electricity from landfill gas. Landfill gas-to-energy facilities at Short Mountain in Lane County and at Coffin Butte in Benton County generated about 36.5 million kilowatt-hours of electric energy in 2004.

Ash Grove Cement Company uses gas from the now-closed St. Johns Landfill in Portland to heat its lime kilns, displacing the use of natural gas and oil. At River Bend Landfill in Yamhill County, landfill gas is burned to evaporate landfill leachate. These two direct-use landfill gas facilities produced about 0.45 trillion Btu of energy in 2004.

For more information, make sure to check out the state’s biomass website.

Biomass, like the other renewable energy alternatives–is something that demands our attention. If we could be producing energy from garbage instead of purchasing fossil fuels, shouldn’t we be doing so?

Wind, wave, nuclear, hydroelectric, geothermal, biomass….

And yet:

The US economy runs on fossil fuels. They provide 86 percent of our energy.

The problem? Radical environmental groups have influenced public and governmental policy. One example,

From 1994-2008 extreme environmentalists have been running “breach the dam” campaigns calling on the government to literally blow up Oregon’s multi-million dollar dams over concerns about fish in the Columbia and Snake rivers.

Or another example:

In 2007, the Oregon Surfrider Foundation filed a motion of intervention with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to oppose the Florence Wave Energy facility.  According to their Mission Statement, “SURFRIDER is dedicated to enhancing wave-riding opportunities.”  Affordable clean renewable energy for all Oregonians is not one of their priorities.  Their opposition prevented this clean renewable energy resource from providing electricity for Oregonians, which in turn would have reduced the amount of greenhouse gas emission in Oregon.  The group’s website proclaims, “For those who love surfing the south jetty…this news was a major victory!”

Oregonians are being hurt be these fringe groups. We are paying higher energy bills, and our addiction to fossil fuels is being prolonging.

Hawaiian plant is latest to convert from coal to biomass

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

According to their website,

The Hu Honua clean energy project produces electricity from locally grown sustainable crops and surplus green waste that would otherwise go unused. The goal of the clean energy project is to utilize 100 percent renewable feedstock, such as wood residue, to generate electricity at the plant.

Project Facts

  • Powers 18,000 homes with renewable energy
  • Replaces 225,000-250,000 barrels of imported oil annually
  • On-island biomass resources, include:
    • residual wood from the local timber industry
    • invasive species clearing operations
    • landscaping materials
    • green waste otherwise being landfilled

Lights on Oregon’s biomass power section is still in production. However, be aware that biomass is yet another tool we can use to wean ourselves off fossil fuels. Let it be clear, options exist. Nevertheless, many environmental groups, instead of supporting such renewable energy initiatives, oppose them and do their best to prevent their success.

Do your part. Sign our petition to the state legislature.