PPV Banner
 

Projects of Interest

Green Choice Virginia
Our Bioenergy Future
Va Biomass Energy Group

Upcoming Events & Registrations

Visions for a Sustainable & Just Community, Panel Discussion hosted by the Sierra Club—Piedmont Chapter, 1:30 pm, Mar. 14, Main Library in Charlottesville

Climate Change in Virginia: Challenges & Opportunities, Fluvanna County Democratic Committee, 7 pm, Mar. 19, Fluvanna County Library in Pleasant Grove

Climate Change in Virginia: Challenges & Opportunities, Appomattox Democratic Committee, 7 pm, Apr. 7, Jamerson Library in Appomattox. Contact: Frank Poynter at fjpoynter@mac.com

Biofuels & Biomass Potential in Virginia, 7 pm, Apr. 13, for more info visit the Williamsburg Climate Action Network, Williamsburg, VA, http://www.williamsburgclimate.org

Earth Day @ The Pavilion (tabling & display), all day event, Apr. 18, Downtown Mall, Charlottesville

Climate Change in Virginia: Challenges & Opportunities, Campbell County Democratic Committee, 7 pm, Apr. 20, place TBA

Earth Day in Nelson Co., all day event, Apr. 22

Media Activity

Al Weed to appear on WINA's "The Schilling Show," for a Climate Change panel discussion, Mar. 31, 12 noon. Tune in to AM 1070!

Read the latest PPV editorial on carbon pricing, published in the Richmond Times-Dispatch on Jan. 15, 2009

Web Extras

Glossary
News
Links


Sponsors

Andritz Sprout
Andritz Sprout
Potomac Supply Corp
Potomac Supply Corp
Dept. of Forestry
Va. Dept. of Forestry
VDMME
Va. Dept. of Mines, Minerals & Energy

Partners

Va Tech
Va. Tech, Dept. of Biosystems Engineering


Virginia Biomass Energy Atlas

As Virginia struggles to deal with a growing population and individual energy consumption rises at the national level, the Commonwealth’s energy generators are pressuring the State Corporation Commission to approve new coal-fired power plants. Seeing no economically feasible substitute for coal power, the SCC approved a 585-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Wise County on March 30, 2008. The opposition to the Virginia City Hybrid Energy Center lacked the data to argue effectively that this plant was unnecessary or that there were less environmentally damaging alternatives.

Public Policy Virginia is currently seeking project funding to produce the Virginia Renewables: A Policy Framework for Our Bioenergy Future. The Policy Framework will provide non-partisan public policy recommendations on renewable energy resources and projects. To support policy recommendations, the Framework will include: (1) biomass feedstock data, (2) an economic analysis of biomass energy feedstocks, (3) an assessment of biomass energy generating technologies, and (4) maps of existing feedstocks and infrastructure. In order to inform legislators and the public of our policy recommendations, PPV will compile, publish and distribute our final report.

Several influential sources, including the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and the Chesapeake Bay Program, have identified Virginia as uniquely well suited to bioenergy production. As a proven leader in the promotion of biofuels, PPV is one of the leading non-governmental organizations promoting bioenergy and has become an authority on the public policy related to it.

Presently, the Commonwealth generates approximately 50% of its electricity from coal and 33% from nuclear fission; both uranium and coal are finite resources. Coal combustion contributes largely to atmospheric carbon dioxide and other airborne pollutants, while biomass is a carbon-neutral, renewable energy resource and, by current estimates, Virginia’s biomass feedstock supply has the potential to produce 9% to 15% of our projected 2010 energy and fuel needs. (If we consider that coal fired generators could co-fire up to 15% biomass, these renewable resources could represent considerably more than 15% of Virginia’s total energy production.) The creation and promotion of a biomass energy industry in Virginia is vital to maintaining the health of our environment, reducing green house gas emissions that lead to global climate change, reducing the demand for land spoiling coal extraction and benefiting air quality.

Public Policy Virginia is a unique position to assess the policy implications of a new biomass energy industry in Virginia; therefore, PPV seeks project funding to produce Virginia Renewables: A Policy Framework for Our Bioenergy Future. To create, promote and regulate a biomass energy industry effectively, business leaders and policymakers need data upon which to base their decisions. They need to know which biomass feedstocks are available, where biomass industry can be located for appropriate scale production and how changes in land-use and resource management will affect competing uses of the biomass feedstock supply.

Other Subsections in Biomass Energy

 

All content © 2008 Public Policy Virginia