The Hamilton Spectator

Contentiou­s export facing good times?

- IAN BICKIS

CALGARY — As Canada’s attention is increasing­ly focused on the polarizing oil exports debate, another contentiou­s energy export has been quietly gaining momentum.

The humble wood pellet, once used mostly for small-scale home heating, has graduated to an alternativ­e to coal in the hungry power plants of Europe and Asia with the disputed promise of carbon neutral energy.

Foreign demand has spurred the growth of operations across Canada, as companies look to make use of waste wood to produce about $500 million a year worth of the product, said Gordon Murray, executive director of the Wood Pellet Associatio­n of Canada.

“It was big in B.C., and then a few Alberta plants got involved, and then also in the Maritimes, and now we’ve got plants in almost every province.”

Exports jumped by 46 per cent in 2016 compared with a year earlier to reach 2.4 million tonnes, according to the National Energy Board, while companies have since continued to make investment­s to further boost production.

Pinnacle Renewable Holdings Inc., which went public with a $150-million initial public offering in February, has built a specialize­d wood pellet terminal in Prince Rupert, B.C., and is working on a 400,000-tonne-peryear pellet facility in Entwistle, Alta. and a 125,000-tonne-peryear

plant in Smithers, B.C.

The company also says it has a few hundred thousand more tonnes of capacity in mid-stage design and engineerin­g, plus over a million tonnes of early stage projects across North America.

The increasing capacity in Canada will help meet demand from both power generation and heating segments that is expected to grow from about 30 million tonnes globally as of last year to 70 million tonnes by 2025, according to industry analyst William Strauss.

He forecasts Japan and South

Korea will account for much of the increased demand, along with growth from the Netherland­s, the U.K. and Denmark as the EU has set a goal of having 35 per cent of power sourced from renewables, including carbon neutral-designated biomass.

Wood pellets are considered carbon neutral because as forests grow they can retrap carbon, but the designatio­n has drawn criticism from environmen­talist and academics who have questioned the equation.

John Sterman, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, published a paper earlier

this year that argued burning pellets would release more carbon dioxide than coal in the short term because it was a less efficient source of energy.

The lag for when the carbon would potentiall­y be reabsorbed to eventually make it carbon neutral is too long when emissions reduction is needed now, said Sterman in an interview.

“The next few decades, the rest of this century, this is the critical period,” said Sterman.

“Biofuels, and especially wood pellets, actually worsen climate change over this period.”

 ?? MIKE GROLL THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The humble wood pellet has become an alternativ­e to coal in the hungry power plants of Europe and Asia.
MIKE GROLL THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The humble wood pellet has become an alternativ­e to coal in the hungry power plants of Europe and Asia.

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