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Sustainability and Bioenergy from Forests Marcia Patton-Mallory, PhD Biomass and Bioenergy Coordinator, US Forest Service Harvesting Green Energy Conference Portland, OR – January 29, 2008
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Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

May 24, 2015

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Bioenergy can be compatible with sustainable forestry when developed with mutual benefits
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Page 1: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Sustainability and Bioenergy from Forests

Marcia Patton-Mallory, PhDBiomass and Bioenergy Coordinator, US Forest ServiceHarvesting Green Energy ConferencePortland, OR –

January 29, 2008

Page 2: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Overview

Sustainability: Forests, Climate Change and Biomass

Opportunities•

Challenges

Page 3: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

“…the capacity to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”

(Brundtland

Commission, 1987)

Sustainability

Page 4: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Sustainability’s Triple Bottom-Line

EnvironmentEnvironment EconomyEconomy

SocietySocietyEnvironmentEnvironment

EconomyEconomy

SocietySociety

(Maureen Hart, Sustainable Measures)

Interconnected and integratedInterconnected and integrated

Page 5: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Forest Service Mission

The mission of the Forest Service is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the Nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations.

Page 6: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Renewable Energy

Solar and Wind Resources on Forests and Grasslands

Hydroelectric and Geothermal Energy

Bioenergy-

heat, power, and biofuels with associated biobased products

Page 7: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Source:

American Solar Energy Society. 2007. http://www.ases.org/climatechange/climate_change.pdf

Page 8: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Opportunities

Page 9: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

U.S. Energy Consumption

Domestic Nuclear Electric

8%

All Imports34%

Domestic Coal22%

Domestic Natural Gas21%

Domestic Petroleum9%

Domestic Renewable Energy

6%

45% Hydroelectric

2% Wind

5% Geothermal

47% Biomass

1% Solar

72% of biomass is wood based

Total = 6.2 Quadrillion Btu

Page 10: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Managing our lands for energy, food and fiber

Page 11: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

U.S. Carbon Emissions Displacement Potential from Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy by 2030

Source:

American Solar Energy Society. 2007. http://www.ases.org/climatechange/climate_change.pdf

Page 12: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Total US Green House Gas Annual Emissions by Sector (EPA, 2003)

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40El

ectri

c Po

wer

Tran

spor

tatio

n

Indu

stry

Agric

ultu

re

Com

mer

cial

Resi

dent

ial

Ag S

oils

Land

fille

d Ur

ban

Was

te

Urba

n Tr

ees

Fore

sts

and

Woo

d Pr

oduc

ts

Sectors

Perc

ent C

O2

Eq. forests and wood products

sequester 11% US GHG emissions annually

Page 13: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Renewable Portfolio Standards

(Source: Database of State Incentives for Renewable Energy. 2007. “Renewables Portfolio Standards.”

NC State University. NC Solar Center. Available online at: http://www.dsireusa.org/documents/summarymaps/RPS_Map.ppt)

State Goal

☼ PA: 18%¹

by 2020

☼ NJ: 22.5% by 2021

CT: 23% by 2020

MA: 4% by 2009 +1% annual increase

WI: requirement varies by utility; 10% by 2015 goal

IA: 105 MW

MN: 25% by 2025(Xcel: 30% by 2020)

TX: 5,880 MW by 2015

☼ AZ: 15% by 2025

CA:

20% by 2010

☼ *NV: 20% by 2015

ME: 30% by 200010% by 2017 -

new RE

State RPS

☼ Minimum solar or customer-sited RE requirement* Increased credit for solar or customer-sited RE

¹PA: 8% Tier I / 10% Tier II (includes non-renewables)

HI: 20% by 2020

RI: 16% by 2020

☼ CO: 20% by 2020

(IOUs)*10% by 2020 (co-ops & large munis)

☼ DC: 11% by 2022

☼ NY: 24% by 2013

MT: 15% by 2015

IL: 25% by 2025

VT: RE meets load growth by 2012*WA:

15% by 2020

☼ MD: 9.5% in 2022

☼ NH: 23.8% in 2025

OR: 25% by 2025

(large utilities)5% -

10% by 2025 (smaller utilities)

*VA: 12% by 2022

MO: 11% by 2020

☼ *DE: 20% by 2019

☼ NM: 20% by 2020

(IOUs)10% by 2020 (co-ops)

☼ NC: 12.5% by 2021

(IOUs)10% by 2018 (co-ops & munis)

ND: 10% by 2015

Page 14: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Biomass Power Plants

Page 15: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

WGA Biomass Task Force-

2006

WGA Biopower

Assessment

Page 16: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

WGA Strategic Development of Bioenergy in the Western US

Draft Preliminary Results 1/08

Page 17: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Pew Center on Global Climate Change 2007

Climate Change Mitigation

Page 18: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Forest Service and Climate Change

Climate Change FrameworkAdaptationMitigation (includes reducing our carbon footprint)

BioproductsPolicyTools

“I propose two forest related goals:

The first goal would be to sustain and strengthen the role of America’s forests as a net carbon sink. The second goal would be to increase the amount of America’s energy that comes from forests. ”

Chief Gail Kimball- Climate Change, Kids and Forests, Sept 7, 2007

Page 19: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Net Energy and Net GHG Emissions

Units of biofuel

produced from 1 unit of fossil fuel

Reduction in GHG emissions to make ethanol compared to

gasoline made from fossil fuel1.3

Corn to ethanol22%

8Sugar Cane to ethanol

56%

2.5Soybean to biodiesel

69%

Up to 36Wood/Grass to ethanol

91%

Data Sources (adapted from C.Mater, Mater Engineering)•Corn to ethanol data: US DOE; EPS; Renewable Fuel's Association; Energy Future Coalition; Worldwatch

Institute•Cane to ethanol data: USDOE; Worldwatch

Institute; Iowa State University•Soy to biodiesel data: USDOE; EPA; Worldwatch

Institute;•Woody/grass biomass to ethanol: USDOE; EPA; WorldWatch

Institute

Page 20: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Challenges

Page 21: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Woody Biomass Potential

368 million tons annuallyBillion Ton Report

Page 22: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Public vs

Private ForestsLand Ownership Matters…

9% federal

58% federal

Page 23: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

ConversionProcesses

Forest BiomassFeedstock- Forest Residues- Hazardous Fuel

Treatments-

Short RotationWoody Crops

-

Wood Waste

USESUSES

Fuels:− Renewable Diesel− Ethanol

Electricity and Heat

Biobased Products– Composites– Specialty Products– New Products– Chemicals– Traditional Products

– Manufacturing– Co-firing– Combustion– Gasification – Enzymatic Fermentation– Gas/liquid Fermentation– Acid Hydrolysis/Fermentation

Biomass Utilization Pathways

Page 24: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Potentially Available Forest Resource

29

14

8

7

44

10

32

15

42

7

15

47

20

7

25

10

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Mill

on d

ry to

nnes

per

yea

r

Logg

ing

Res

idue

Oth

er R

emov

al R

esid

ue

Fuel

Tre

atm

ents

(Tim

berla

nd)

Fuel

Tre

atm

ents

(Oth

er F

ores

tland

)

Fuel

woo

d

Woo

d R

esid

ues

(For

est P

rodu

cts)

Pulp

ing

Liqu

ors

(For

est P

rodu

cts)

Urb

an W

ood

Res

idue

GrowthUnexploitedExisting Use

Source:

DOE and USDA “Billion Ton Report”

May 2005

http://www1.eere.energy.gov/biomass/publications.html

Page 25: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Sustainability and Communities Biobased Products and Bioenergy

Source:

James and Lahti, 2004, The Natural Step for Communities

materials

air quality

fuelchoice

heat

incentiveprograms

treeprotection

watershed protection

recyclingprograms

power

powergeneration

ecoindustrialparks

agriculturalzoning

purchasing

pestmanagement

culture andtradition

Page 26: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

RA FRCC

http://www.landfire.gov/rapid_assessment.php

Restoring Fire Adapted Forest Ecosystems

Page 27: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Forest Insect and Disease Risk

Page 28: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Agricultural and Wood Residues

Page 29: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Sustainability and Bioenergy

Forest Resource Issues

National Policy•

State Policy

Public Interest

Sustainability-

Energy, Environment, Economy

Effective biomass policy is essential to achieving Effective biomass policy is essential to achieving sustainable forests in the United Statessustainable forests in the United States

Page 30: Harv Gr Eng Bioenergy Sustain Forest Jan 2008 Mpm

Thank you!

Contact Information:

(970) 295-5947

[email protected]

For more information, please visit: http://www.fs.fed.us/woodybiomass