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U.S. South could be biomass breadbasket
Written by Hakan Ekstrom | Wood Resources International   
July 13, 2010, Seattle, WA – Demand for woody biomass, in the form of wood chips, wood pellets, and torrefied pellets, will increase substantially in Europe over the next 10 years. Exactly how much, though, is unclear because the size of the increase will depend on policies and subsidies implemented by governments in individual countries within the European Union. The cost of locally sourced biomass on the continent has increased for many energy plants, resulting in increased interest in importing wood chips and pellets from neighboring countries or overseas.

The U.S. South is at the top of the list as a long-term biomass supply source for a number of energy companies. This is because the region has a stable supply of pulpwood, a well functioning infrastructure, and competitive wood fibre costs, as compared to most other markets in the world. According to the Wood Resource Quarterly, only Chile and the Western United States had lower softwood pulpwood prices than the U.S. South during the first quarter of 2010. Hardwood wood fibre prices were well below the global average hardwood price index.

One region in the U.S. South that has drawn much attention is the tri-state area of southern Georgia, southeast Alabama, and northern Florida, a wood fibre hotspot that is profiled in the latest issue of the North American Wood Fiber Review. Within this area, a significant number of new wood-to-energy facilities have been announced, with one major pellet plant already operating. Sited in northern Florida, Green Circle Bioenergy began operations in early 2008 and is exporting the entire production to energy plants in Europe.

Two additional large-scale, export-oriented pellet plants are on the drawing board. The German company RWE’s plant in southern Georgia is under construction, with plans to commence production in the third quarter of 2011. Magnolia Biopower has announced plans for its own pellet export plant, also to be sited in southern Georgia.

This expanding renewable energy sector is situated within a stronghold of the traditional southern pulp industry, with seven pulp mills within this southeastern sub-region. The high concentration of wood fibre consumers within a fairly limited area has pushed wood costs higher in the past few years. Pine stumpage prices have increased faster in this region than the average price across the southern United States. In the second quarter of 2010, prices were more than 50% higher than two years ago. With the expected increase in wood consumption by the energy sector in this sub-region, it is likely that pulpwood costs will continue to be higher in this sub-region than the average for the U.S. South.