· The U.S. can triple biomass production with significant contributions from its forestry sector
· Forestry can provide an additional 63 million dry tons of woody biomass per year
Washington D.C., April 18, 2024 – The U.S. Department of Energy 2023 Billion-Ton Report: An Assessment of U.S. Renewable Carbon Resourcesidentifies sustainable forestry as a key pillar in the effort to increase the nation’s biomass production. Woody biomass accounts for more than 40 percent of total U.S. bioenergy consumption, helping lower greenhouse gas emissions across industrial, residential, and commercial applications.
The report estimates this contribution can grow significantly and within strict sustainability limits that ensures new capacity promotes net carbon sequestration, water regulation, protection of biodiversity, healthy communities, and many additional ecosystem services.
“These findings underscore that woody biomass is a sustainable, abundant resource, especially in our southern timberlands, which hold 46% of our nation’s total forests,” said Elizabeth Woodworth, Interim Executive Director of the U.S. Industrial Pellet Association. “There is tremendous potential for our industry to expand both in production capacity and through new applications where solutions to de-fossilize operations are needed most.”
The U.S. is the world’s leading exporter of wood pellets used primarily to displace fossil fuels and generate reliable, low-carbon power and heat. It shipped 9.5 million metric tons valued at $1.75 billion to more than a dozen countries in 2023.
“The Billion-Ton Report shows that America is poised to lead the world in the emerging renewable biomass industry—unlocking exciting economic opportunities for agricultural and rural communities and helping advance the sustainable fuels we need to cut harmful emissions and deliver healthier communities across the nation,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm in a release announcing the report.
The report—the fourth in a series of assessments of potential biomass resources in the U.S.—again demonstrates there is ample biomass available across the forested land base to help meet growing demand while at the same time providing significant ecological and economic benefits. It estimates that sustainable forestry can provide 63 million dry tons of woody biomass per year above current production levels.
Washington D.C., August 10, 2023 – The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) welcomes the United Kingdom’s Biomass Strategy, which underscores the essential role that sustainable biomass plays in supporting the country’s energy security and its path to net zero.
Graham Stuart, the Minister of State for Energy Security and Net Zero in the UK Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, commented that biomass has an “extraordinary” future potential for transport, heat and electricity. Of note, the strategy also includes a priority role for Bioenergy Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS), which is seen as critical for meeting net zero plans as it can provide large-scale carbon removals.
The policy paper makes clear the UK intends to realize this full potential, setting out steps the government will take to strengthen biomass sustainability criteria and capitalize on opportunities to use sustainable biomass to decarbonize multiple sectors of its economy.
“We applaud the United Kingdom and its agencies for setting a clear policy pathway and vision for the continued use of biomass in its overarching goals to Net Zero. Biomass is a component in both reducing and removing emissions associated with energy demand to reach the island’s climate goals,” said Amandine Muskus, USIPA Executive Director. “Sustainability is paramount to ensuring biomass delivers tangible climate benefits while supporting healthy forests and protecting biodiversity. We look forward to continued dialogue and working with UK partners and leaders to ensure our members can continue to support the UK’s decarbonization efforts with a stable supply of sustainable biomass.”
The US Southeast is the world’s leading region for wood pellet exports, and the UK’s largest supplier of woody biomass. This region has been the center of America’s forest products industry since the early 20th century, and is one of the largest and most sustainably-managed wood baskets in the world.Scientific research continues to show it is a sustainable and dependable sourcing area for woody biomass that can help meet growing demand while maintaining healthy forests and balanced carbon stocks.
According to the US Department of Agriculture, wood volume in this region has increased by 21% since 2000, and southeastern landowners are currently growing 43% more wood than they remove every year. Independent analysis shows this trend is also consistent within the local sourcing areas surrounding multiple biomass production plants.
As noted by forest economists, forest stocks have been increasing in the US Southeast because markets for wood products, like biomass, provide financial incentives for private landowners to keep investing in the continual cycle of thinning, harvesting and replanting trees.
March 30, 2023
USIPA welcomes today’s conclusion of the trilogue process for updating the EU’s Renewable Energy Directive (RED) with an agreement that is positive for the climate, forests and the continued contributions of sustainable biomass toward supporting both.
In a win for science-based policy-making, the EU will maintain its recognition of sustainably-sourced woody biomass as a 100% renewable energy source, and enable its use to increase, a necessary measure according to leading analyses to achieve the bloc’s ambitious climate goals.
The compromise represents a measured approach for further strengthening the EU’s strict sustainability criteria, while rejecting several unnecessary and counterproductive proposals, including a cap on the use of Primary Woody Biomass. Peer-reviewed studies increasingly offer robust evidence that woody-biomass is currently sourced in a responsible way that provides a positive impact for the climate and environment.
The outcome also ensures that U.S. biomass producers will continue to play a significant role in supporting the EU’s decarbonization pathway. The U.S. southeast is the world’s leading region for wood pellet exports. Scientific research continues to show it is a sustainable and dependable sourcing area for woody biomass that can help meet growing demand while maintaining healthy forests and balanced carbon stocks.
September 14, 2022
We are encouraged by the EU Parliament’s continued recognition of primary woody biomass as an important renewable energy source, and allowing for its growth. Europe faces immense challenges with energy security and affordability as it seeks to accelerate its transition away from fossil fuels. Primary woody biomass provides 20 percent of the EU’s renewable energy, and is an indispensable solution for addressing all of these issues. It will be critical to reach a compromise in trilogue that excludes provisions that would arbitrarily limit the contributions of biomass – in particular, unnecessary restrictions around the use of primary woody biomass.”
July 13, 2022
We applaud the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy (ITRE) for putting forth increased climate ambitions in today’s vote on the RED. Raising the EU’s renewable energy target to 45 percent by 2030 is an important milestone to remain on course to reach net zero by 2050.
As supported by the IPCC and the IEA, sustainable biomass is an indispensable solution for achieving climate goals, and currently provides more renewable energy than the EU’s total wind and solar output combined. The European Commission’s own modelling shows biomass use must at least double as part of a sufficient path to net zero, which is why Parliament must address overly-restrictive language in the RED that would prevent this growth – in particular, unnecessary restrictions around primary woody biomass.
These provisions, if left uncorrected, would exclude otherwise sustainable feedstocks and arbitrarily limit biomass supply, pushing ambitions of 45 percent renewable energy far out of reach.
Effort to declassify ‘primary woody biomass’ as renewable fails to gather momentum as Member States vote with science and secure the role of biomass in reaching Fit for 55 climate goals.
RICHMOND, VA, June 28, 2022 – The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed continued support for sustainable sourcing of ‘primary woody biomass’ by the EU Council’s General Approach for revising the Renewable Energy Directive (REDIII).
Amendments to the directive that would declassify ‘primary woody biomass’ as renewable energy were proposed by the European Parliament’s Environment Committee in May, but have failed to gain momentum after the Transport, Regional Development, Agriculture and Development Committees all voted to continue the use of primary woody biomass, and they are now joined by the 27 member states of the EU.
“It is increasingly clear that calls to disqualify ‘primary biomass’ represent a fringe view within EU institutions as more policymakers examine the issue, and for good reason,” said Jessica Marcus, Vice President, Policy and Operations for USIPA. “Doing so will set back efforts to achieve energy security, raise energy prices for consumers, and significantly risk any chance of meeting Green Deal climate targets.”
Primary woody biomass is made from feedstock sourced directly from forests as opposed to secondary sawmills, and accounts for nearly 20 percent of the EU’s renewable energy consumption – more than the bloc’s combined wind fleet. These forest residues are critical not only for providing a significant amount of secure and sustainable energy, they also support healthy forests by providing a market for low-value fiber, and additional revenues to help landowners practice sustainable forest management.
While the European Commission and Council do not support declassifying primary biomass, Parliament has yet to establish its position on the matter. This should formalize during a plenary vote in early fall, paving the way for interinstitutional negotiations among all three branches of the EU government to begin by the end of the year. This trialogue is expected to continue into 2023 and will ultimately determine any changes to biomass rules.
In the meantime, Europe’s energy crisis is placing immense pressure on efforts to decarbonize, and threatens a relapse towards fossil fuels that will make it even harder to meet climate goals. Germany, Italy, Austria and the Netherlands all recently announced plans to resurrect old coal plants as gas supplies decline, prolonging their paths to net zero.
“Bioenergy is the EU’s largest source of renewable energy, and one that crucially helps address both security and climate imperatives,” said Marcus. “As the process to revise REDIII moves forward, policymakers must ensure bioenergy continues to provide affordable, secure and sustainable energy to help alleviate the current crisis, and support long-term climate goals.”
April 4, 2022
The IPCC’s scientists have again said that sustainable bioenergy is essential for achieving net zero and avoiding catastrophic climate change both as a provider of renewable energy and a way to remove carbon from the atmosphere. The science is clear - sustainable bioenergy use needs to scale up rapidly around the world and we support the IPCC’s focus on sustainability and robust regulations to ensure that biomass delivers benefits for our climate, environment and communities.
October 14, 2021
Chatham House again finds itself in contradiction with the UN IPCC on the role of sustainable biomass as an essential tool for mitigating climate change. The conclusions of its latest report are deeply flawed, and are based on a total rejection of carbon accounting and reporting guidelines as determined by the world’s leading authority on climate science.
These methodologies were reaffirmed by the UN IPCC in 2019 following a review of the latest scientific literature, and with input from thousands of climate scientists. A peer-reviewed paper published this year by 28 leading academics also found that the UN IPCC reporting approach is “accurate, has no gaps and does not assume that bioenergy is carbon neutral although it has sometimes been described as such.”
That Chatham House continues to cling to a thoroughly debunked position while vigorously promoting it to the public as a consensus view, deeply undermines its standing as a trusted forum for debate and dialogue.
Only two months ago, the UN IPCC released its Sixth Assessment report, representing our latest and best understanding of both the causes of climate change and the action needed to prevent it. The report shows indisputably that sustainable biomass is essential to limiting global temperature rise and avoiding the worst impacts of a warming planet. In particular, the IPCC pathways that give humanity the best chance at achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement rely significantly on bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS). The models show BECCS is needed to extract almost 5bn tons of CO2 a year – or twice the EU’s annual emissions – by mid-century, increasing to 17bn by 2100.
Chatham House must ask itself why the IPCC would champion sustainable biomass, indeed citing the need for its rapid expansion, if it is not a climate solution.
April 21, 2021
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed the EU Taxonomy which classifies sustainable bioenergy as an environmentally sustainable activity, underscoring its indispensable role in the EU’s low-carbon energy transition.
Released by the European Commission, the EU taxonomy is seen as an important enabler to scale up sustainable investment and to implement the European Green Deal. By establishing clear definitions on which economic activities can be considered environmentally sustainable, the taxonomy is expected to create security for investors and help shift investments where they are most needed.
“We welcome the EU’s new rules on taxonomy, in particular that sustainable bioenergy use for power and heat production is recognised as making a ‘substantial contribution’ to climate mitigation,” said Seth Ginther, USIPA Executive Director.
Requirements for sustainable bioenergy included in the taxonomy are also consistent with the strict, harmonised EU-wide sustainability criteria that was introduced in REDII just two years ago. This decision ensures the EU only sources biomass that makes a positive contribution to the climate and healthy forest ecosystems.
“The upcoming revision of REDII should follow a similar approach to ensure a sufficient and secure supply of sustainable biomass that multiple analysis show will be needed to achieve the EU’s climate ambitions for 2030 and beyond,” said Ginther. “We stand ready to support EU Member States and the European Parliament, and share our expertise during their work on the new rules.”
Sustainable bioenergy already represents almost 60% of renewable energy consumption in the EU and its role in displacing coal, decarbonising industry and providing negative emissions is vital to meeting EU climate targets.
January 27, 2021
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed a report from the EU Joint Research Center (JRC) adding to the growing body of research confirming the climate benefits of sustainable biomass.
Authored by the research arm of the European Commission, the report notes that bioenergy sits at the nexus of two of the main environmental crises of the 21st century: the biodiversity and climate emergencies. It further states that wood-based bioenergy, when produced sustainably and used efficiently, can provide part of the solution to both crises.
“We welcome the JRC report which underscores the importance of sustainable biomass in helping the EU achieve ambitious climate goals while promoting forest health and safeguarding biodiversity,” said Seth Ginther, USIPA Executive Director.
The report also validates sustainability criteria for woody biomass included in REDII, and further supports swift and robust implementation of these criteria to effectively minimize negative impacts. REDII introduced strict, harmonized, union-wide sustainability criteria which, together with risk-based forestry certification schemes, underpin the sustainability of all biomass used in the EU.
The report does not represent current sourcing practices in the US Southeast, but rather analyzes the potential risks of increased biomass demand. Indeed those risks are currently mitigated through various independent globally recognized certifications, including SBP and will be further mitigated through the implementation of the RED II sustainability criteria later this year. This includes assurance of replanting or regeneration after harvest, protection of sensitive areas and habitats, maintenance of forest carbon stock across the region, and a multitude of other environmental protections.
“We support EU efforts to consider risks and ensure they are managed to avoid unsustainable biomass sourcing,” said Ginther. “The JRC makes clear that implementation of REDII sustainability criteria will successfully mitigate these risks, and allow the EU to continue relying on sustainable biomass to help decarbonize its economy and reach net zero.”
October 8, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed the European Parliament’s resolution on the ‘European Forest Strategy - the Way Forward’.
The resolution recognizes that forests and the entire forest-based value chain are fundamental to the further development of the circular bioeconomy, helping deliver climate change mitigation and adaptation services, and protecting biodiversity.
In this resolution, the European Parliament takes a holistic approach on sustainable forest management (SFM), which builds on economic, social and environmental sustainability in a balanced way, and ensures the continuity of the multifunctional role of forests.
Maintaining a forest economy is vital for the health of forests. The biomass industry works closely with other members of the forest value chain by taking low-value fiber, for example residues and thinnings, which do not meet the specifications of other high-value forest industries, thus ensuring the best possible carbon-outcome.
We welcome, therefore, that the Parliament supports the substitution of fossil-based raw materials and energy, and promoting the most efficient use of wood following the ‘cascading principle’. To that end, we strongly oppose the Commission’s suggestion in the Biodiversity Strategy to ‘minimize whole trees’ – a term that has no proper definition in forestry – which would distort the established market-driven cascading principle with no carbon or environmental benefits.
As its largest single source of renewable energy, sustainable woody biomass is a cornerstone of the EU’s low-carbon energy transition. We welcome the European Parliament’s call for the Commission and the Member States to continue the implementation of sustainability criteria for biomass under the recast of the Renewable Energy Directive, and to optimize the climate benefits of substituting carbon-intensive, fossil-based materials and energy.
COPENHAGEN – October 5, 2020 – The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed a political agreement that sets into law new sustainability requirements for wood biomass used in Denmark. The new law, which is supported by the Danish government and a majority coalition of eight political parties, replaces a voluntary industry agreement that has regulated sustainable biomass use since 2014.
“Sustainability is paramount to ensuring biomass delivers tangible climate benefits while supporting healthy forests and protecting biodiversity,” said Seth Ginther, USIPA Executive Director. “We applaud Danish leadership for designing strict, yet workable, criteria that provides important sustainability guarantees, while securing the critical role of biomass in helping Denmark reduce emissions and reach its climate goals.”
Denmark is among the EU’s leading Member States in its transition to a carbon neutral economy. In 2020, more than 37% of its energy production came from renewable sources. Sustainable biomass is the largest contributor to Denmark’s renewable energy mix, and is largely responsible for replacing the use of coal in the electricity and heating sector.
“Biomass is absolutely crucial to ensure that our electricity and heat are not made from coal imported from countries we do not want to depend on,” said Morten Messerschmidt of the Danish People's Party. “With the agreement we are able to ensure it is sustainable, and that Danes continue to have a stable supply of heat.”
The new law sets firm sustainability criteria for preserving carbon stocks and carbon sinks in source forests, and for protecting natural areas and biodiversity, among other measures. US producers are able to meet these requirements and have been supplying Member States with sustainable biomass for more than a decade.
Last year the US exported nearly 6 million metric tons of biomass to the EU, primarily from its Southeastern states. This region has been the center of America’s forest products industry since the early 20th century, and is one of the largest and most sustainably-managed wood baskets in the world.
According to the US Department of Agriculture, wood volume in this region has increased by 21% since 2000, and southeastern landowners are currently growing 43% more wood than they remove every year. Independent analysis shows this trend is also consistent within the local sourcing areas surrounding multiple biomass production plants.
As noted by forest economists, forest stocks have been increasing in the US Southeast because markets for wood products, like biomass, provide financial incentives for private landowners to keep investing in the continual cycle of thinning, harvesting and replanting trees.
Contact: Taylor Fitts, tfitts@theusipa.org
September 17, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association welcomed today’s proposal from the European Commission to accelerate the EU’s transition to a climate neutral economy. Over the past decade, sustainable biomass has displaced millions of tons of coal in Europe and will play a critical role in helping achieve the EU’s 2030 Climate Targets.
The Commission’s plan calls for a series of ambitious new climate targets to be met by the end of the decade on the path to achieving climate neutrality by 2050. Sustainable biomass is poised to make significant contributions to several of these, including reducing the bloc’s greenhouse gas emissions by 55% compared to 1990 levels; increasing its share of renewable energy to 38-40%; and decreasing coal and gas consumption by 70% and 25% respectively, compared to 2015 levels.
As its largest single source of renewable energy, sustainable biomass is a cornerstone of the EU’s low-carbon energy transition. We welcome the Commission’s recognition that, in order to meet its ambitious targets for 2030 and 2050, the EU will need more sustainable biomass to balance the grid and support a massive expansion of intermittent renewables like wind and solar.
Sustainability is paramount to ensuring biomass delivers tangible benefits for the climate. US producers are leading in this area, thanks to our ability to provide substantial quantities of renewable fuel to EU Member States while supporting healthy forests and protecting biodiversity.
The fact that forest inventory and carbon stocks are higher in our source forests today than when the industry began a decade ago underscores our ability to operate sustainably. It further shows that current practices and regulations with respect to using only low-value feedstocks results in more forests, not less.
When it comes to guaranteeing biomass sustainability, the Renewable Energy Directive (REDII) introduced strict, harmonized, Union-wide sustainability criteria which, together with risk-based forestry certification schemes, underpin the sustainability of biomass produced by our members. Therefore, we do not believe additional measures are needed in order to minimize the use of so-called ‘whole trees’, indeed these could be counter-productive. The sustainability requirements currently in place, as well as the market forces at the forest level, ensure that our biomass is sustainable.
We look forward to continued dialogue and working with our partners and EU leaders to ensure a stable supply of low-carbon energy that displaces fossil fuels, preserves our forests in the US Southeast and helps the EU achieve newly proposed 2030 climate targets.
June 30, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed a report from the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis recognizing the role of sustainable biomass in its call for the US to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. The report sets out a serious vision for the nation to tackle climate change, and provides an action plan for creating a clean energy economy in the US.
“In the midst of a truly global climate crisis, we welcome today’s report and its driving ambition to decarbonize the US economy,” said Seth Ginther, USIPA Executive Director. “Given our vast and increasing forest resources, there is tremendous potential for sustainable biomass to become an integral part of America’s low-carbon, renewable energy mix.”
US biomass already plays an indispensable role in helping countries around the world reduce their reliance of fossil fuels and cut carbon emissions. Indeed, today’s proposal echoes the findings of recent, high-profile reports from the European Union, United Kingdom and the Netherlands which all reiterate the need for sustainable biomass to achieve their respective carbon emissions goals.
The use of sustainable forestry and biomass have received consistent Congressional and scientific support as essential tools to preserve forests and limit global temperature rise. Most recently, the non-partisan Congressional Research Service issued a report in April 2020 highlighting the positive role that bioenergy and other forest products play in mitigating the effects of climate change.
The Climate Committee’s report also emphasizes the use of next-generation energy technologies, including Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS). Citing the UN IPCC’s projection that BECCS will be deployed globally to remove several hundred gigatons of atmospheric carbon, the report calls on Congress to establish a BECCS research program in coordination with the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The program’s aim would be to help develop standards and best practices to improve carbon removal while minimizing land and environmental impacts.
“BECCS represents the prospect of generating carbon negative electricity, which will be a game-changing technology when deployed at scale,” said Ginther. “We look forward to working with Members of Congress to develop policies that help our country realize the full benefits and potential of sustainable biomass in moving us closer to a carbon-neutral economy.”
June 15, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
Today’s report from Ember ignores the leading peer reviewed science on sustainable biomass. As the International Energy Agency has recently stated, “the most important climate change mitigation measure is to transform energy and transport systems so that we can leave fossil carbon in the ground. Biomass is a critical technology to achieve this, as it provides the necessary grid stability to support the widespread use of intermittent renewables like offshore wind.”
Seth Ginther, Executive Director of the US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) stated, “The leading science on this is well-established; biomass, when sustainably-produced, significantly lowers carbon emissions for power generation compared to coal. That’s why the use of sustainable biomass is championed by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and other leading scientific bodies including the International Renewable Energy Agency, the European Forest Institute, and the U.S. National Association of University Forest Resource Programs.”
“While our industry welcomes robust scrutiny and debate on the issues, it’s important for us to recognize and acknowledge that we have reached a tipping point where the overwhelming data, evidence and peer reviewed research points to the fact that sustainable biomass is part of the climate change solution,” said Ginther.
According to the International Energy Agency, “Forest biomass is by definition renewable if it is harvested from forests that are managed such that there is no loss of productive capacity – i.e., so that growth/harvest cycles can continue indefinitely and capacity to sequester carbon is not diminished.” This is a primary reason why the US Southeast, one of the world’s largest and most sustainably-managed forest regions, is a leading provider of sustainable biomass that has enabled the UK to displace millions of tons of coal and dramatically reduce carbon emissions.
Forest inventory analysis from the US Department of Agriculture shows forest stocks in this region have increased by 20% over the past 20 years, and are double what they were in the 1950s. During a time of considerable growth, urbanization, and demand for forest products, the data continues to confirm that US forests are stable, productive and healthy, even as they provide a steady supply of renewable wood products.
The data shows that sustainable biomass is actually helping to maintain the region’s expanding forest stock. Research conducted by the University of Georgia, University of Illinois and North Carolina State University concludes that as the demand for sustainable biomass increases, the area under forestlands also increases. The research found that forestland in the US could increase by 1.4 million hectares from 2007 to 2032 under a high-demand scenario for biomass.
Sustainable biomass is a vital element of a lower-carbon energy mix, on which the future of our planet relies. By adhering to already existing stringent sustainability criteria for solid biomass under UK law, US biomass will continue to serve as a critical technology to increase carbon stores in our forests, keep fossil fuels in the ground and support the global effort to mitigate climate change.
May 20, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association welcomed today’s EU Biodiversity Strategy which acknowledges that sustainable biomass will be integral to achieving Europe’s carbon reduction and biodiversity goals. This communication from the European Commission outlines its vision to combat climate change and biodiversity loss, and is part of a multi-step legislative process that will unfold over the coming years.
Over the past decade, sustainable biomass has made significant contributions towards current 2020 emissions targets and biodiversity goals by displacing millions of tons of coal and preserving forest habitat.
Forests in the US Southeast are a great success story in this regard with forest cover increasing 21% since 2000. This growth has occurred at the same time as our members have produced substantial quantities of renewable fuel for EU Member States, precisely because creating markets for wood products leads to sustainable forests that allow biodiversity to thrive.
The Biodiversity Strategy also calls to minimize the use of certain feedstock categories for biomass, including whole trees. The biomass industry only sources what other forest product users do not want or use, including lower-value whole trees. This is a sustainable practice and in keeping with the principle of using wood fiber for its greatest climate benefit.
Markets ensure that the biomass industry does not buy high-quality wood fiber used to make end products with permanent carbon storage, such as mass timber, telephone poles or furniture. Furthermore, regulations and legislation, such as the REDII, guarantee that biomass is sourced sustainably and does not result in negative impacts to forest ecosystems.
We look forward to continued dialogue and working with our partners and EU leaders on these topics to ensure a stable supply of low-carbon energy that displaces fossil fuels and preserves our forests in the US Southeast.
May 11, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed an order from the European Court of Justice dismissing a case against wood biomass. The court ruled the applicants, a group of 6 individuals and NGOs, lacked standing to challenge the EU’s inclusion of wood biomass in the bloc’s Renewable Energy Directive.
“We welcome the court’s ruling, which removes unnecessary uncertainty over the future of renewable energy in Europe,” said Seth Ginther, USIPA Executive Director. “Although this was a procedural ruling this was the right overall result, as the arguments put forward in the case had no value. The European institutions carried out an open consultation to gather scientific and environmental advice and considered these during the legislative process. The result was a revised Renewable Energy Directive that set out rigorous standards for the inclusion of sustainable biomass in the European energy mix.”
Including the UN IPCC’s latest Special Report on Climate Change and Land, the body of academic research, studies and papersdocumenting the climate and forest benefits of wood biomass continues to grow.
Wood biomass, derived from the forest products industry, is the EU’s largest single source of renewable energy, and is a key technology for achieving the bloc’s climate goals set out in the Green Deal.It enables European power generators to repurpose existing coal-based infrastructure with a renewable alternative that reduces the carbon intensity of electricity generation by up to 85% on a life-cycle basis.
Last year the US exported nearly 6 million metric tons of biomass to the EU, primarily from its Southeastern states. This region has been the center of America’s forest products industry since the early 20th century, and is one of the largest and most sustainably-managed wood baskets in the world.
According to the US Department of Agriculture, wood volume in this region has increased by 21% since 2000, and southeastern landowners are currently growing 43% more wood than they remove every year. Independent analysisshows this trend is also consistent within the local sourcing areas surrounding multiple biomass production plants.
As noted by forest economists, forest stocks have been increasing in the US Southeast because markets for wood products, like biomass, provide financial incentives for private landowners to keep investing in the continual cycle of thinning, harvesting and replanting trees.
May 8, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, TFitts@theusipa.org
The US Industrial Pellet Association (USIPA) today welcomed a report from the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency PBL underscoring the essential role of biomass to achieve a climate neutral circular economy.
“We agree with today’s report, which reiterates that biomass plays a crucial role in helping the Netherlands transition from fossil fuels and meet its carbon emissions goals,” said Seth Ginther, USIPA Executive Director. “Our producers are committed to protecting forests and preserving biodiversity, which we have been able to achieve through internationally-recognized certification programs.”
The report further outlines that forestry, and the production of woody biomass, can result in the net storage of carbon in forests. The US Southeast, a large supplier of biomass to the Netherlands and other EU countries, is specifically cited as a region where wood volume has more than doubled since the 1950s.
This positive trend is driven by thriving markets for forest products, which provide strong financial incentives for private landowners to grow trees. Today, 1.8 trees are planted for every tree harvested in the region. As confirmed in the report, biomass is a small part of the overall forestry economy. It accounts for less than 3% of all fiber harvested each year in the US Southeast. Still, it is imperative for biomass to be produced from sustainably-managed forests to preserve habitat and ecosystem services.
“All US biomass producers not only adhere to stringent US laws and regulations to preserve our production forests, they also comply with sustainability criteria in all EU markets,” said Ginther. “We encourage the Social Economic Council (SER) to ensure the Netherland’s sustainability criteria is workable, enforceable and in line with the EU’s established approach, which is demonstrated to be working.”
The report, entitled “Availability and Sustainability of Biomass” will help inform the Dutch Sustainability Framework, which will be published later this month by the Netherland’s Social and Economic Council (SER).
Along with wind and solar, sustainable biomass supplied by the U.S. has become a vital part of the Netherland’s renewable energy mix, displacing coal to provide low-carbon baseload electricity.
January 29th, 2020
Contact: Taylor Fitts, tfitts@theusipa.org
A report issued today by Chatham House questions the effectiveness of Biomass with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) technology. We welcome this report, as continuing research on forest biomass is important to quantify the risks and benefits associated with its use, encourage dialogue and debate, drive innovation and investment in new technologies, and inform policy. These are especially important subjects in light of the ambitious goals set by the U.K. to reach carbon net zero by 2050, and the benefits that sustainable biomass may bring to reaching this goal.
However, this report fails to recognize that the U.K.’s regulations for bioenergy are among the most stringent in the world, and ensure that only biomass that meets the highest of sustainability standards is used to achieve climate goals. The concerns expressed in the report over sustainability and land-use change are ‘worse-case scenario’ situations, and mitigation measures are in place through-out the forest supply chain to prevent them from occurring. In particular, biomass sourced from the U.S. Southeast addresses the report’s core concerns, meeting sustainability requirements and delivering real carbon benefits, especially when paired with carbon capture technology.
Here are two main points of concern with corresponding information on how our sustainable sourcing practices address them.
Statement #1 from Chatham House Report: “It is not valid to assume that biomass for energy is inherently carbon-neutral” (and thus that BECCS, by capturing and storing the emissions from combustion, is carbon-negative).
It is important to recognize that not all biomass is sustainable. However, it is equally important to recognize the real carbon benefits of biomass that is, such as the wood fiber sourced from the U.S. Southeast. Indeed, the carbon benefits of sustainable forest biomass energy are well-established.
This is a conclusion supported by the world’s foremost climate and forestry experts. It is considered the number one fundamental of biomass carbon accounting according to a recent letter signed by more than 100 international forest scientists. These same scientists also emphasize the science fundamentals of how to measure carbon benefits of biomass and how to compare them to the fossil fuels emissions to account for the biomass benefits accurately.
As recently explained with the example of North Carolina forests by Bob Apt and Fred Cubbage – both forestry professors at North Carolina State University who have published research on forest carbon - measuring carbon benefits of biomass has to be done with the right metric. “… One stand is not the right metric for carbon neutrality and sustainability. The overall forest volume in the region or the state is correct. Forest stands always mature, die, regenerate — naturally by old age and mortality (like people) or by planned timber harvests and planting or natural regrowth. …So, since the state has increasing overall timber volumes per acre and in total, we are sustainable, and we are carbon neutral or better.”
This conclusion is shared by Puneet Dwivedi, a professor of forest sustainability sciences at the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry who recently explained, “When assessing carbon emissions from biomass, what matters is not the fate of individual trees, but whether the forest as a whole is regenerating at a rate sufficient to maintain or increase its overall volume of the wood fiber. If forests are growing at this rate – as they have been for the past 50 years in the Southeast, where the majority of America's wood biomass is sourced – they recapture the carbon emitted by burning wood pellets or any other wood-based energy feedstocks within a year.”
Statement #2 from Chatham House Report: “BECCS could lead to widespread land-use change, and prove problematic for developing countries.”
Our members source biomass from the U.S. Southeast, which is among the world’s most sustainably-managed wood baskets. This region encompasses about 1.2 million sq. km of forests, which is larger than France, Germany and the U.K. combined. What’s more impressive than the scale of this natural resource, is how well it’s been managed over the past 100 years. The land-use change experienced here is defined by healthy, expanding forests.
According to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, forest inventory and forested area has steadily increased since the mid-1950’s, while carbon stocks have more than doubled, despite the pressures of record population growth and urban development. This is due in large part to strong markets for forest products, which incentivize the private landowners – which collectively own 87% of the forestland here – to continue planting trees.
Wood biomass accounts for just 3% of all wood fiber harvested in the U.S. Southeast each year. While this is a small fraction relative to the overall forest products sector, wood biomass still provides a critical market for lower-value wood to private landowners, which incentivizes them to keep growing trees for all uses.
Regarding concerns of land use change, a recent report from the University of Georgia and the U.S. Forest Service projects that the absence of a market for wood biomass would actually result in the loss of up to 15,000 square kilometers of U.S. forestland, roughly the size of the Netherlands, over a 10 year period. So not only is demand for biomass good for U.S. forests, but loss of this demand could result in less forestland overall.
In terms of biomass availability, a recent report from a European consortium projects that the U.S. is actually well-below its sustainable capacity. The research shows the sustainable export potential for biomass from the Southeast U.S. is more than double its current production levels.
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