Boardman coal-burning power plant may have a future
after all: biomass
Feb 2 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Matthew Preusch The Oregonian,
Portland, Ore.
Portland General Electric has three options for its Boardman power
plant: close it, stop burning coal there, or make costly upgrades to
clean up emissions.
Most of the debate about Boardman, Oregon's only coal-fired power plant
and the state's largest single source of air pollution, has focused not
on whether, but when, it should shut down. But the utility is looking at
the possibility of keeping Boardman open by burning biomass instead of
coal to spin its turbines.
They aren't the only utility considering replacing some of their coal
with plant material, but they are among the few thinking about doing
away with coal entirely by using biomass, said Christopher Wright, a
research engineer and biomass energy specialist at the Idaho National
Laboratory.
"In that regard, they are on the forefront of that thinking when we look
out on the landscape," Wright said.
Coal-fired power plants in Europe, charged with reducing
emissions of climate-changing gasses, are already replacing portions of
their coal with wood pellets imported from British Columbia, the
southeastern United States and elsewhere.
"Once the Europeans realized that that was a fairly cost efficient way
to meet the goals for renewable energy standards, the demand started to
grow very rapidly over the last four or five years," said Keith Balter,
senior economist with Forest Capital Partners in Portland.
North America's pellet industry has grown from having the capacity to
produce about 1 million metric tons in 2003 to an estimated 6 million
tons last year, according to a recent U.S. Department of Agriculture
study.
U.S. coal plant owners see similar regulations on the horizon, so
utilities like PGE are considering mixing wood pellets with coal in
their boilers.
"We're actually looking at doing some co-firing with green pellets in
the very near future, just as a test," said Jaisen Mody, director of
generation projects for PGE.
Right now, Oregon's wood pellet industry is focused on home-heating
stoves and animal bedding products.
Andrew Haden, vice-president of A3 Energy Partners, a Portland
pellet-for-energy company, did some back-of-the-envelope calculations
and found that if just 15 percent of Boardman's energy needs came from
biomass, that would require about 500,000 tons of pellets year.
"That would mean a doubling or even tripling of Oregon's pellet
production," Haden said.
Assuming testing at Boardman goes well, and they could find enough
pellets, the Portland-based utility estimates it can replace up to 20
percent of the coal at their 585-megwatt Boardman plant with wood
pellets similar to those used to heat homes.
While that would drop Boardman's contribution to climate change, PGE
would still need to install expensive upgrades at the plant to comply
with clean air laws, which is what prompted the utility's recent
announcement it could close the plant by 2020, about 20 years ahead of
schedule, or switch to an alternative fuel.
"When you replace all the coal with biomass, you could reduce the amount
of that equipment substantially," said Mody.
So PGE is looking at whether it can replace all of the millions of tons
of coal it burns a year at Boardman with plant material that has been
pre-treated through a still experimental process called torrefaction.
In torrefaction, plant material is roasted at high temperatures -- 200
to 300 degrees Celsius -- until it becomes a dry, high-energy substance
similar to the Kingsford charcoal you might use to grill steaks on your
Weber.
This so-called torrefied biomass can be easily converted to pellets,
making it easy to haul and simple to burn at pulverized coal plants like
Boardman.
"This acts like coal and behaves like coal," Wayne Lei, director of
research and development at PGE.
But it's not nearly as easy to find as coal.
There are no commercial-scale torrefaction facilities in the U.S. And
PGE estimates it would need about 2 million tons of torrefied biomass a
year to operate Boardman, which supplies about 15 percent of the energy
used by its more than 800,000 customers.
And though the torrefied material has a high energy content, it requires
significant energy to produce, calling into question whether it's a
truly renewable resource.
"At this point, it doesn't seem realistic, because torrefaction is
really in an experimental phase and not at a commercial scale," said
Cesia Kearns, an anti-coal activist with the Sierra Club.
Kearns said PGE should focus on a mix of renewable energy projects and
energy efficiency initiatives to replace Boardman's power production.
The utility could also replace part of Boardman's output with new
natural gas plants.
"It's not going to be a silver bullet, but rather silver buckshot" that
replaces Boardman, Kearns said.
Mody said that torrefied biomass, what little there is, costs from
$100-120 per ton, roughly three to four times coal hauled by rail from
Wyoming.
A big part of that price difference is the cost of transporting the
biomass to Boardman.
Lei, PGE's research chief, said the answer to the supply question could
lie in a tall, reed-like grass called Arundo donax, or giant cane.
Californians know the plant as an imported species that has run wild
along some of their waterways, causing extensive environmental damage.
But PGE thinks the plant can be safely grown as a crop in Oregon and
converted to fuel for Boardman.
They would need to convince enough farmers that it's in their economic
interest to grow a lot of giant cane, about 90,000 irrigated acres
worth. Morrow County, home to Boardman, has a total of 89,897 acres of
irrigated farmland planted in food crops.
"Can they routinely, sustainably get that amount every year from the
Oregon countryside?" said Wright of the Idaho national lab.
That's just one of the questions PGE will consider as it spends the next
several years planning for Boardman's future, or lack thereof.
(c) 2010,
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services
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