Bio Mass in Oregon: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Wastebytype.jpg|center|599px|Solid Waste by Type]]
[[File:Wastebytype.jpg|center|599px|Solid Waste by Type]]


[http://www.oregonmetro.gov/index.cfm/go/by.web/id=4518 Metro is responsible for managing recycling and disposal of solid waste] in the region. [http://www.oregonmetro.gov/index.cfm/go/by.web/id=570 Metro] says the region produces 247,000 tons per year of food waste and food soiled paper products.  [http://www.oregonmetro.gov/index.cfm/go/by.web/id=12852 Metro's Regional Solid Waste Management Plan] details solid waste issues. [http://www.columbiabiogas.com/ourProducts/index.html Columbia Biogas] says that, according to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Environmental_Protection_Agency the EPA], landfills are the second-largest human-related source of methane in the U.S., accounting for 23 percent of all methane emissions in 2007. Their facility would transform food waste commonly delivered to landfills into multiple “green” products including natural gas, electricity and fertilizer.
[http://www.oregonmetro.gov/index.cfm/go/by.web/id=4518 Metro is responsible for managing recycling and disposal of solid waste] in the region. [http://www.oregonmetro.gov/index.cfm/go/by.web/id=570 Metro] says the region produces 247,000 tons per year of food waste and food soiled paper products.  [http://www.oregonmetro.gov/index.cfm/go/by.web/id=12852 Metro's Regional Solid Waste Management Plan] details solid waste issues. [http://www.columbiabiogas.com/ourProducts/index.html Columbia Biogas] says that, according to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Environmental_Protection_Agency the EPA], landfills are the second-largest human-related source of methane in the U.S., accounting for 23 percent of all methane emissions in 2007. The Columbia Biogas facility would transform food waste commonly delivered to landfills into multiple “green” products including natural gas, electricity and fertilizer.


[[File:Oregon.biomass.jpg|center|500px|Oregon Biomass]]
[[File:Oregon.biomass.jpg|center|500px|Oregon Biomass]]

Revision as of 11:45, 15 April 2012

Bio Mass in Oregon is part of the Green industry portal

Living plant material is the source of all biomass fuel. Oregon´s biomass resources include wood, agricultural crop residue and organic waste.

Energy Mix Chart from the Oregon Dept of Energy
Energy Mix Chart from the Oregon Dept of Energy

Oregon DOE says biomass can be used to produce liquid fuels such as ethanol and biodiesel, generate electicity, or create bioproducts such as plastics or adhesives.

Biomass uses plant or wood products like trees, wood chips, and yard clippings to generate electricity or produce heat. The Oregon Forest Resources Institute says about 15% of Oregon’s forestland have the potential to provide useful woody biomass through thinning. Fuel prices per kWh are lower for wood, says the Biomass Energy Center.


Columbia Biogas is planning a $60 million facility in Northeast Portland that will use anaerobic digestion, commonly used at municipal wastewater treatment facilities, food processing facilities, and at dairy farming operations, says the company. Columbia Biogas will create 85 jobs during construction and another 20 long-term jobs once operations are underway.

Columbia Biomass
Columbia Biomass

The $40 million biogas facility would be located on an 11-acre parcel near the intersection of Northeast Columbia Boulevard and Highway 205. The plant would produce 3 megawatts of power initially, with plans to ramp up to 5 megawatts — powering between 3,000 and 5,000 homes. The company has contracts in place with the utility to sell the power and with Metro for the waste it would need to operate. It will convert local food waste into renewable energy.

Growth of Biomass facilities in Europe
Growth of Biomass facilities in Europe

As of 2010, 150 anaerobic digesters were in operation in the United States. Columbia Biogas won't seek city of Portland funding to help build their $60 million green-energy plant, but company would be eligible for a $15 million federal grant if it finishes building the facility in 2013, reports the Oregonian. "This is a comfortable deadline as long as the construction starts on schedule in June," Columbia Biogas told city officials. Columbia Biogas says it will create 85 jobs during construction and another 20 long-term jobs once operations are underway. The Portland-based company, said in a letter to Mayor Sam Adams, that the project has received “significant interest from the financial community,” prompting a decision to finance the facility privately.

Solid Waste by Type
Solid Waste by Type

Metro is responsible for managing recycling and disposal of solid waste in the region. Metro says the region produces 247,000 tons per year of food waste and food soiled paper products. Metro's Regional Solid Waste Management Plan details solid waste issues. Columbia Biogas says that, according to the EPA, landfills are the second-largest human-related source of methane in the U.S., accounting for 23 percent of all methane emissions in 2007. The Columbia Biogas facility would transform food waste commonly delivered to landfills into multiple “green” products including natural gas, electricity and fertilizer.

Oregon Biomass
Oregon Biomass

Governor Kitzhaber has unveiled biomass grants, through the Forest Products Energy Project, to develop the state's biomass industry. The existing biomass power generated in the United States, consists of approximately 11,000 MW of summer operating capacity, producing about 1.4 percent of the U.S. electricity supply.

The Oregon Department of Energy estimates that the total energy value of biomass fuel consumed in Oregon was 79 trillion Btu in 2003, about 10 percent of the total amount of non-transportation energy consumed in the state. Biomass supplies about 9 percent of all industrial energy consumed in the state.

Biomass Chart from the Oregon Dept of Energy
Biomass Chart from the Oregon Dept of Energy

Some mills use biomass fuel to generate electricity for on-site uses. Pulp mills burn the residual fiber and components of spent pulping waste to recover and recycle pulping chemicals and to generate steam. Pellets and fuel logs manufactured in Oregon and firewood collected from Oregon forests supply heat to homes.

Celluosic plant in Boardman
Celluosic plant in Boardman

ZeaChem will construct a huge cellulosic biorefinery in Boardman, producing bio-based fuels and chemicals from woody biomass and agricultural residues. The company completed construction of a pilot facility and will ship the fuel down river on barges, through the Port of Morrow.

The new commercial-sized facility is expected to have capacity of 25 million or more gallons-per-year, adjacent to ZeaChem’s 250,000 GPY demonstration biorefinery.

Financed in part with a $235 million loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, ZeaChem, a Colorado-based energy company, expects the $390 million biofuel refinery will be producing fuel and valuable by-products by late 2014. ZeaChem must meet specified conditions before the 60 percent loan guarantee can be completed. Currently, Silicon Valley Bank is the bank of record for the project.

Bio Fuel
Bio Fuel

To break down biomass, ZeaChem uses a natural bacterium, acetogen, found in termites, cockroaches and other organisms. The bacterium ferments cellulose into acetic acid, which is made into ethanol. No carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, is produced in the fermentation.

ZeaChem will make fuel from a 28,000 acre poplar plantation in Boardman owned by GreenWood Resources of Portland. About 70 percent of ZeaChem's raw material will come from those trees. About 30 percent will come from agricultural residue, including feedstock, which costs about 50% less than Brazilian sugar cane and 80% less than corn based processes, says the company.

The Waste Management/InEnTec energy project at the Arlington, Oregon landfill converts municipal solid waste (household trash) into clean energy byproducts.

InEnTec operation at Arlington Landfill
InEnTec operation at Arlington Landfill

InEnTec, a Bend startup, converts landfill waste to gas. In October it landed a $22.5 million investment from Waste Management, and has recieved another $26 million investment, according to their SEC filing. InEnTec’s Plasma Enhanced Melter is the secret sauce. InEnTec's technology uses intense heat to change the molecular structure of waste into an ultra pure synthesis gas (syngas), which can be converted into clean energy fuels such as hydrogen, ethanol and biodiesel.

Cow poop is another energy source. Some 80 percent of the estimated 160 biogas energy projects in the U.S. are currently installed on dairy farms, which then combust the gas to generate electricity. The combined installed capacity of all dairy farm projects is nearly 60 MW.

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