4.6 Article

Impact of biopower generation on eastern US forests

Journal

ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 4087-4105

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10668-022-02235-4

Keywords

Biopower; Woody biomass; Renewable energy; Forest inventory; Electric power sector

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Biopower, as a significant source of renewable energy in the US, shows positive ecological conditions and carbon balances. The study found that timberland areas around biopower plants have more live and standing-dead trees, and carbon stocks compared to areas around coal-burning plants. With longer biopower generation, there is an upward trend in carbon stocks within live trees.
Biopower, electricity generated from biomass, is a major source of renewable energy in the US. About ten percent of US non-hydro renewable electricity in 2020 was generated from biomass. Despite significant growth in woody biomass use for electricity in recent decades, a systematic assessment of associated impacts on forest resources is lacking. This study assessed associations between biopower generation, and selected timberland structure indicators and carbon stocks across 438 areas surrounding wood-using and coal-burning power plants in the Eastern US from 2005 to 2017. Timberland areas around plants generating biopower were associated with more live and standing-dead trees, and carbon in their respective stocks, than comparable areas of neighboring plants only burning coal. We also detected an inverse association between the number of biopower plants and number of live and dead trees, and respective carbon stocks. We discerned an upward temporal trajectory in carbon stocks within live trees with continued biopower generation. We found no significant differences related to the amount of MWh biopower generation within the analysis areas. Net impacts of biopower descriptors on timberland attributes point to a positive trend in selected ecological conditions and carbon balances. The upward temporal trend in carbon stocks with longer generation of wood-based biopower may point to a plausibly sustainable contribution to the decarbonization of the US electricity sector.

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