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I'm going to pick on Germany a bit here, based on something I recently learned in the solar power thread: About 9% of Germany's power is produced by wood biomass burning, second only to wind in their "renewable" sector. Clearly, wood can be "renewable", but to me the more important question is: is it green?
It appears that the EU considers biomass to be "carbon netural" and thus subsidizes it as a clean, renewable energy source. But the situation is not so clear in the US and there is debate about the issue (sources below).
My first pass at the issue is that calling biomass "carbon neutral" and therefore "green" is figuratively and even quite literally missing the forest for the trees. Trees are renewable and carbon neutral in exactly the same way fossil fuels are -- they are, after all, one of the things that generates the "fossils" for fossil fuels. The main difference is the timescale. Trees sequester carbon and if they get buried deep, they sequester carbon for a very long time. Along those lines, an old forest is sequestering more carbon than a young forest and a tree that has been installed in support of a house is sequestering carbon for decades or even centuries longer instead of putting it immediatly back in circulation by burning it.
So to me, while it is true that when viewed from a conservation of mass standpoint and only considering the power plant use in isolation that biomass is carbon neutral, the other ways to use trees are carbon negative or carbon sequestering. So the change of use is therefore carbon positive.
Thoughts?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_in_Germany
US policy discussion by a biomass advocacy group:
http://www.afandpa.org/issues/issues-group/carbon-neutrality-of-biomass
EU and biomass:
https://www.chathamhouse.org/expert/comment/wood-not-carbon-neutral-energy-source
It appears that the EU considers biomass to be "carbon netural" and thus subsidizes it as a clean, renewable energy source. But the situation is not so clear in the US and there is debate about the issue (sources below).
My first pass at the issue is that calling biomass "carbon neutral" and therefore "green" is figuratively and even quite literally missing the forest for the trees. Trees are renewable and carbon neutral in exactly the same way fossil fuels are -- they are, after all, one of the things that generates the "fossils" for fossil fuels. The main difference is the timescale. Trees sequester carbon and if they get buried deep, they sequester carbon for a very long time. Along those lines, an old forest is sequestering more carbon than a young forest and a tree that has been installed in support of a house is sequestering carbon for decades or even centuries longer instead of putting it immediatly back in circulation by burning it.
So to me, while it is true that when viewed from a conservation of mass standpoint and only considering the power plant use in isolation that biomass is carbon neutral, the other ways to use trees are carbon negative or carbon sequestering. So the change of use is therefore carbon positive.
Thoughts?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_in_Germany
US policy discussion by a biomass advocacy group:
http://www.afandpa.org/issues/issues-group/carbon-neutrality-of-biomass
EU and biomass:
https://www.chathamhouse.org/expert/comment/wood-not-carbon-neutral-energy-source