Drax AGM targeted over biomass conversion plans 25th April

50 peo­ple took part yes­ter­day in a demon­stra­tion and ral­ly out­side the annu­al gen­er­al meet­ing of Drax Plc, at the Gro­cers’ Hall in Lon­don, organ­ised by Bio­fu­el­watch and sup­port­ed by 16 oth­er groups.

50 peo­ple took part yes­ter­day in a demon­stra­tion and ral­ly out­side the annu­al gen­er­al meet­ing of Drax Plc, at the Gro­cers’ Hall in Lon­don, organ­ised by Bio­fu­el­watch and sup­port­ed by 16 oth­er groups. The protest opposed Drax pow­er station’s plans to con­vert half of its gen­er­at­ing capac­i­ty to bio­mass, and high­light­ed the impacts that this will have in terms of increased defor­esta­tion, land-grab­bing and car­bon emis­sions.

50 peo­ple took part yes­ter­day in a demon­stra­tion and ral­ly out­side the annu­al gen­er­al meet­ing of Drax Plc, at the Gro­cers’ Hall in Lon­don, organ­ised by Bio­fu­el­watch and sup­port­ed by 16 oth­er groups [1]. Demon­stra­tors chant­ed “Drax Drax, what do you say? How many trees have you killed today?” and hold­ing ban­ners read­ing “Big Bio­mass: Fuelling Defor­esta­tion, Land-grab­bing and Cli­mate Dis­as­ter”, “Big Bio­mass is Green­wash not Renew­able Ener­gy” and “Drax the Destroy­er!”. Bio­fu­el­watch called the demon­stra­tion to oppose Drax pow­er station’s plans to con­vert half of its gen­er­at­ing capac­i­ty to bio­mass, and to high­light the impacts that this will have in terms of increased defor­esta­tion, land-grab­bing and car­bon emis­sions.

The protest coin­cid­ed with the pub­li­ca­tion of an open let­ter to Drax Plc signed by 49 dif­fer­ent organ­i­sa­tions and net­works world­wide, includ­ing Friends of the Earth Inter­na­tion­al, the Glob­al For­est Coali­tion and World Rain­for­est Move­ment [2]. The let­ter con­cludes: “We oppose com­mer­cial and indus­tri­al scale bioen­er­gy, and demand that the UK halt coal con­ver­sion plans and force these coal plants to shut down. Mean­while focus must be redi­rect­ed towards a seri­ous reduc­tion of ener­gy con­sump­tion and dra­mat­ic mea­sures to pro­tect and restore forests and oth­er ecosys­tems.”

Drax’s bio­mass plans will require pel­lets made from 15.8 mil­lion tonnes of wood each year, mak­ing it the biggest bio­mass-burn­ing pow­er sta­tion in the world. By com­par­i­son, the UK’s total annu­al wood pro­duc­tion is only 10 mil­lion tonnes. Over­all, ener­gy com­pa­nies in the UK are plan­ning to burn up to 10 times as much wood as the UK pro­duces ever year. Wood burned by Drax increas­ing­ly comes from whole trees felled for this pur­pose [3].

In addi­tion to issues of defor­esta­tion and land-grab­bing, recent sci­en­tif­ic stud­ies have shown that bio­mass used for elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­a­tion is actu­al­ly more car­bon inten­sive than burn­ing coal [4]. Dun­can Law from Bio­fu­el­watch said: “Burn­ing bio­mass on the scale pro­posed will be even more car­bon inten­sive than the coal it will replace, and result in a mas­sive car­bon debt stored just where we don’t want it, in the atmos­phere. Far from being a low-car­bon fuel, it’s a total cli­mate dis­as­ter!”.

For local com­mu­ni­ties, coal to bio­mass con­ver­sions will mean decades more of high lev­els of pol­lu­tion, since the con­ver­sions allow pow­er sta­tions to con­tin­ue oper­at­ing when they may oth­er­wise have to close down [5].

Notes:

[1] The fol­low­ing organ­i­sa­tions are for­mal­ly sup­port­ing Tak­ing DRAX­tic Action: Cam­paign Against Cli­mate Change; Car­bon Trade Watch; Chris­t­ian Ecol­o­gy Link; Cli­mate Jus­tice Col­lec­tive; Coal Action Net­work; Coal Action Scot­land; Colom­bia Sol­i­dar­i­ty Cam­paign; Cor­po­rate Watch; Frack Free Som­er­set; Fuel Pover­ty Action; Gaia Foun­da­tion; Lon­don Min­ing Net­work; Lon­don Ris­ing Tide; Occu­py Lon­don Ener­gy, Equi­ty and Envi­ron­ment Group; Ris­ing Tide UK; World Devel­op­ment Move­ment.

[2] The Open Let­ter to Drax can be found at http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/2013/drax-signon-letter/

[3] The Dog­wood Alliance, a non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tion work­ing to pro­tect forests in the South­ern US, released a report enti­tled “The Use of Whole Trees in Wood Pel­let Man­u­fac­tur­ing,” in Novem­ber 2012 doc­u­ment­ing the fact that the top exporters of wood pel­lets in the region rely heav­i­ly on cut­ting down whole trees to sat­is­fy demand from Euro­pean pow­er sta­tions. Scot Quaran­da, Cam­paign Direc­tor for Dog­wood Alliance said “Ener­gy com­pa­nies in the UK, includ­ing Drax, RWE and E.On are con­vert­ing large, old, dirty and inef­fi­cient coal pow­er sta­tions to bio­mass all in the name of reduc­ing car­bon emis­sions, but the real­i­ty is that this shift will accel­er­ate cli­mate change while also dri­ving destruc­tive indus­tri­al log­ging in the world’s most bio­log­i­cal­ly diverse tem­per­ate forests.” Through direct inves­ti­ga­tion and research, the report doc­u­ments the use of whole trees from South­ern forests by the largest wood pel­let man­u­fac­tur­ers and exporters in the South­ern US. Pel­let man­u­fac­tur­ers such as Geor­gia Bio­mass, a whol­ly owned sub­sidiary of RWE, and Envi­va, a major sup­pli­er of Drax and E.On are high­light­ed in the report as using or if not open, plan­ning to use, whole trees. The report can be found here  http://www.dogwoodalliance.org/2012/11/new-report-discredits-uk-energy-company-claims-that-pellets-come-from-wood-waste/

[4] For a list of stud­ies into the car­bon impacts of bio­mass elec­tric­i­ty, see www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/resources-on-biomass. In addi­tion, the report “Dirt­i­er than coal?” pub­lished by RSPB, Friends of the Earth and Green­peace can be found here www.rspb.org.uk/Images/biomass_report_tcm9-326672.pdf

[5] Accord­ing to a brief­ing by Depart­ment for Ener­gy and Cli­mate for the House of Lords on 14th Feb­ru­ary 2013, “the con­ver­sion of exist­ing coal gen­er­at­ing plant to bio­mass or high­er lev­els of bio­mass co-fir­ing is a way of keep­ing open some exist­ing coal plant that would oth­er­wise close before 2016 under envi­ron­men­tal leg­is­la­tion, and there­fore improve capac­i­ty mar­gins over this decade.” ( http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201213/ldselect/ldsecleg/123/12306.htm)