There's a ZBA meeting tonight in Greenfield about a proposed Biomass plant that a developer would like to build in the industrial park. Here's
a blog post by Myriam Erlich Williamson at The Back Forty that contemplates the issue. I found it interesting that environmentalist heavyweight
Bill McKibben posted favorably about the biomass projects in
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As somebody who burns wood for household heat, I find it hard to reject the idea out of hand, but the problem is in the details. When you start talking about burning waste products, people immediately start talking about costruction and demolition waste. Apparently, Massachusetts is very stringent about what you can do with C&D waste and a lot of it ends up getting trucked to other states. So a lot of people think that biomass is a back-door way of allowing incineration of C&D waste.
There is a real difference of opinion on whether a biomass plant would promote sustainable forestry practices (by making it profitable to clean up slash) or whether it would drive more clearcutting.
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This plant would make more of a contribution to global warming, per kilowatt of energy produced, than does an average coal or oil-fired plant. That's because while wood, coal, and oil power plants release carbon into the atmosphere, trees remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, which coal and oil do not. So at least when you burn coal and oil you are not removing carbon removers from the system. The reforestation of New England is one of the important factors working against global warming.
I can't believe that this plant is even being considered, except by the people who are going to make money off it.
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