JoseCuervo
New member
I think the High School in Council, ID is heated by wood chips and a boiler system.
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If these forests had truly been maintained properly, utilizing the tools I listed in my above post, this may have still taken place, but would have been lessened to a large degree...
Proper thinning and burning long ago would have lessened fuel loading making in the end, less intense fires, giving existing trees and other plants less competion for resources (light/water/nutrients)
That boils down to management of resources for the long haul, not just for some ones political career at the moment
Thanks for the info on co-gen. From the few meetings I've been to, the transportation costs are definitely a concern. Luckily, the places they are considering for the plants have literally TONS of JUOS within a short distance.1-Pointer - Most everything I've see on biofuels and Co-generation plants lately is simply the open market price for energy is currently lower than the minimum they could produce it for. And I believe one of the biggest problems is with the cost of getting the material from the woods to the co-gen plants. An average cost of getting the biomass material to the plant is around $38-$42 per ton. Until they can get that down below $30, I've heard it is just not that viable of an option.
I think the biomass burners that schools and public buildings are installing are a great thing. The only thing is unless it's a big system, they don't take much material to operate. I don't know the actual numbers but to run the schools there might only take 20 truckloads of material. While it's a good thing, I don't imagine it would have too much of an impact on forest management.