October 2008

California's Renewable-Energy Disconnect

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By Kay Martin

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Sustainability—Since thermal/fermentation technologies can utilize any and all carbonaceous wastestreams in the state’s biomass inventory, they provide the dual benefit of renewable energy production and environmental mitigation. It’s estimated that these conversion technologies could produce as many as 2.7 billion gallons of ethanol and 2,500 MW of power just from the over 40 million tons of post-recycled municipal wastes California will place in landfills this year. It is more sustainable to beneficially use the waste biomass feedstocks the state already has in such abundant supply rather than consume valuable land and water resources for energy-crop production.

Clearing the remaining hurdles for commercialization of thermal/fermentation technologies, however, has been fiercely opposed by a small but effective group of individuals—both inside and outside the state legislature. Attempts to more closely align California’s renewable-energy and waste-management policies have been consistently blocked by key “gatekeepers,” who cloak their political arguments in an environmental mantle.

Zero Thermal and Zero Waste
Environmental opposition to thermal MSW processing harks back to the early days of mass-burn facilities, when dioxins, furans, and other pollutants posed tangible air-quality hazards to surrounding communities. Although modern incinerators have dramatically reduced their emissions and now operate in compliance with strict federal guidelines, the stigma of past pollution remains. So enduring is this legacy in California that only three waste-to-energy facilities are operating currently, all of which were permitted prior to 1995.

Thermal opponents have recently launched a national campaign to extend the pollution tar-brush to new non-combustion biomass-conversion technologies as well, characterizing them as “incinerators in disguise.” Despite ample scientific evidence to the contrary, this type of fear mongering continues to color the perceptions of legislators and the general public alike.

For ardent supporters of the “zero-waste” platform, the crusade against thermals goes well beyond pollution claims. It raises the more fundamental question of whether MSW should be utilized for energy production at all. Critics argue that the entire wastestream can be feasibly abated through a strategic combination of producer responsibility, consumer abstinence, and more aggressive recycling and composting. Since the ultimate goal is to reduce wastestream materials to zero, MSW residuals are viewed as neither renewable nor sustainable.

In this mindset, the fear is not that new biomass-conversion technologies won’t work. It’s that they will actually perform as advertised. The theory is that if advanced clean technologies are commercialized to economically produce green power and fuels from residual urban biomass, then runaway consumption and waste-generation patterns will proceed unchecked.

Herein lies the heart of the waste-versus-energy disconnect. Continued hoarding of California’s largest biomass-resource supply for the exclusive use of the recycling and composting industries is increasingly untenable. The CIWMB faces an escalating challenge to demonstrate how its current zero-waste policies can both complement and facilitate the achievement of state renewable-energy and climate-change imperatives.

While recycling is often touted as an energy-saver and an effective strategy for GHGs reduction, the new CARB climate-change roadmap notes that in-state benefits attributable to recycling and composting have not been quantified. Indeed, the life cycle assessments on which these conclusions are based seldom calculate the energy and pollution costs of shipping the bulk of California recyclables to Asian markets. Nor do they consider the global air-quality impacts of shifting the burden of remanufacture and reuse to developing nations where environmental controls are minimal or nonexistent. California’s ability to realize GHG reductions in the future may depend, in part, on its role in increasing or decreasing the state’s exposure to industrial pollutants originating in the Pacific Rim.

Similarly, strategies for reducing GHG emissions from landfills will require the application of several diversified technologies for the productive upstream diversion of biomass materials. Despite its claim to a 54% recycling rate, California will bury the same amount of waste this year as it did in 1990. Population and economic growth have kept pace with source reduction and recycling efforts, and this trend is expected to continue. Since composting can effectively deal with only 30% of targeted biomass materials, the systematic exclusion of other conversion technologies from the state’s bioenergy toolkit virtually guarantees that the bulk of these resources will continue to be disposed of rather than put to beneficial use.

This represents a lost opportunity to not only achieve emissions reductions from landfills, but also to redeem the climate-change and petroleum-displacement benefits that may be derived from alternative biopower and biofuels production. Experts agree that the most sustainable method of producing renewable transportation fuels is through the conversion of biomass wastes. The GHG benefits of commercializing both low- and high-temperature biorefineries are geometric in effect—reduction of landfill disposal and associated emissions, utilization of a sustainable feedstock supply, and net emissions reductions from both the refining and burning of resultant fuels when compared to their petroleum equivalents.

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Closing the Gap
Each of the biomass technologies discussed here has a critical niche and a role to play in the achievement of renewable-energy and GHG-reduction goals. But if we are to be successful in meeting both state and national objectives, the disconnect between bioenergy initiatives and policies governing the largest perpetual source of domestic biomass must be bridged. Similar to recent amendments to European Union waste law, the middle “recovery” rung of the waste management hierarchy must be expanded—beyond recycling and composting—to recognize the beneficial use value of conversion technologies that produce green power, fuels, and chemicals from recovered biomass.

Access to and productive use of biomass materials must be democratized, and market success based ultimately upon process efficiency, cost, and environmental performance. In the spirit of California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard, a truly integrated bioenergy and climate-change policy restrains government from picking winners and losers and instead creates a level and competitive playing field to spur industry innovation.

Author's Bio: Kay Martin is vice president of the BioEnergy Producers Assoc.

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