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Pacific BioEnergy gets green light to log inland rainforest for wood pellets

Sean O’Rourke was hiking in B.C.’s globally rare inland rainforest this spring when pink flagging tape indicating a planned cutblock caught his eye.
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The Pacific BioEnergy plant on Willow Cale Forestry Road is seen in a 2010 file photo.

Sean O’Rourke was hiking in B.C.’s globally rare inland rainforest this spring when pink flagging tape indicating a planned cutblock  caught his eye. Finding flagging tape is nothing new, but when he looked  closer, he realized the tape had the name of a nearby pellet company on  it — Pacific BioEnergy. 

The  company operates a plant in Prince George where it turns waste wood  products — sawdust from mills, tree bark, wood shavings and clippings —  into pellets to be burned to produce heat or electricity, replacing coal  and fossil fuels. More than 90 per cent of Canadian wood pellets are  shipped overseas to Europe and Asia, according to the Wood Pellet Association of Canada. 

But the ancient cedars and hemlocks in the rainforest in Lheidli T’enneh First  Nation territory, about 60 kilometres east of Prince George, are most  certainly not waste wood. 

O’Rourke, a field scout with Conservation North,  a grassroots organization advocating for the protection of old-growth  forests in northern B.C., took photos of the flagging tape to show his  colleagues. He later combed through the publicly available harvest data  to confirm the province had indeed issued permits to Pacific BioEnergy  to log the old-growth forest. 

While wood pellets are often touted as a renewable energy source, Conservation  North director and ecologist Michelle Connolly challenges that claim. 

“If the  raw material for harvested wood products or pellets is coming from  primary and old-growth forest, it is not clean or green or renewable in  any way, shape or form,” she said in an interview. 

“Destroying  wildlife habitat to grind forest into pellets to ship them overseas to  burn, to feed into an electricity plant so that people can watch Netflix  or play video games really late at night — we can’t allow that to  happen,” she added. 

The  planned cutblock is set to be logged this winter for pellets, but  Conservation North is asking the B.C. government to provide legal  protection to all primary forests — those that have never been logged —  in the northern region. 

Rare ecosystem home to massive trees, endangered caribou, vast carbon stores

After  O’Rourke showed his colleagues his photos, they went to the rainforest  together to explore the areas slated for logging. The group walked for  almost two hours to get to the flagged boundary. The forest is  surrounded by clearcuts and second-growth stands of lodgepole pine.  Connolly described it as an oasis.

“There are  low carpets of moss and beautiful fallen old trees,” Connolly said.  “The stands that we’ve seen have really large western red cedars and  western hemlock, and we occasionally came across massive Douglas firs  that are really large for this area … it would take at least three  people to wrap your arms around them.” 

More than 500 kilometres from the coast, the inland rainforest is one of the rarest ecosystems in the world.  Temperate rainforests far from the sea are only found in two other  places on the planet: in Russia’s far east and southern Siberia.

The rainforest supports a variety of animals including moose and endangered caribou. The stands of old-growth trees have been absorbing carbon from the  atmosphere for hundreds of years, and the soil also stores huge amounts  of carbon.

The rich biodiversity of these old-growth forest ecosystems is threatened by logging, according to a report published in June. 

As The Narwhal reported last year,  much of what remains of the inland temperate rainforest is at risk of  clearcutting. Connolly said there is “little to no social licence” to  harvest these old-growth trees. 

“We talked  to a lot of people who hunt, who trap, who fish, who guide, and among  those people, we’ve sensed a lot of dismay about what’s happening,” she  said. “We’re kind of at the limits of tolerance up here.”

B.C. government ramps up support for pellet industry while plants run out of raw materials

The  province’s promotion of the pellet industry focuses on using wood that  would otherwise be wasted or burned in the forest to reduce the risk of  wildfires, but rarely mentions the use of whole trees. 

“The  pellet pushers (including the present NDP government) originally said  they would use only logging and milling debris as the source of wood  fibre for pellets,” Jim Pojar, a forest ecologist wrote in an email. 

However, a recent investigation by Stand.earth found that pellets made of whole trees from primary forests in B.C. are being sent to Europe and Asia. 

“No mature  green trees should be cut down and whole logs ground up to produce wood  pellets for export, especially if the trees are clear cut from globally  rare and endangered temperate rainforest,” Pojar said.

Connolly said a lack of legal protection allows the government to greenlight  logging whole trees for pellets — and the province’s language around the  industry hides the fact that old-growth is being cut down.

“My  understanding is that this is allowed because these forests don’t have  any other use,” she said, meaning that they aren’t suitable for making  lumber. 

“The B.C. government has some really interesting language around justifying pellet harvesting,” she said. “What they say is that they’re using inferior quality wood.

 This isn’t the first time a pellet facility has logged trees to meet its production needs. As The Narwhal reported earlier this year, both Pacific BioEnergy and Pinnacle Renewable Energy, another large-scale pellet company, use whole trees to produce pellets.

Over the  past few years, B.C. has been ramping up its support for the wood pellet  industry, but as sawmills shut down across the province, pellet  facilities are running out of raw material. 

Recently, the province handed out a number of grants to support projects that take trees that would otherwise be burned on the forest floor in  massive slash piles and convert them to pellets. Pacific BioEnergy has  received more than $3.2 million from the province through the Forest Enhancement Society for projects related to its operations.

Connolly  said the province’s push to support the pellet industry is problematic.  “We’re kind of rearranging the deck chairs, you know? They’re making  little modifications of things they already do, instead of actually  looking at the value of keeping the carbon in forests.”

The  Ministry of Forests could not comment on this story because government  communications are limited to health and public safety information  during election periods.

The Narwhal also requested an interview with Pacific BioEnergy but did not receive a response by publication time.

Ecologists say burning pellets is not carbon neutral

Wood  pellets, sometimes referred to as biomass or bioenergy, are often touted  as carbon neutral and sustainable, but critics claim that’s a dangerous  misconception.

Burning wood to generate energy is less efficient than burning fossil fuels,  which means more wood is needed to produce an equivalent amount of  electricity, according to Pojar. More carbon dioxide is sent into the  atmosphere from pellet-fuelled power plants than traditional coal or  natural gas plants, he pointed out. 

The pellet  industry and its supporters argue that replanting trees will eventually  sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, which means burning  pellets for heat or energy is carbon neutral. But even if that is true,  it could take hundreds of years for those replanted trees to grow big  enough to offset the emissions produced by harvesting, transporting,  processing and burning the wood. 

In a 2019 report entitled Forestry and Carbon in BC, Pojar outlined myths and misconceptions about emissions and the  forestry industry. “The CO2 from the combustion of biofuel is released  almost instantly, whereas the growth and regrowth of wood takes several  decades at least (mostly more than 75 years in B.C.)” 

Connolly,  who was an editor of the report, said the green narrative around the  pellet industry and industrial logging is misleading.

“It’s so ridiculous to claim that somehow logging is good for the climate,” she  said. “What we’ve seen happen is that the B.C. government and industry  have co-opted climate change to argue for more industrial logging. In  this case, it’s for pellets, but they’ve been doing the same thing for  harvested wood products for the last few years.”

As climate  change, industrial logging and other resource extraction projects  continue to impact forest ecosystems, maintaining intact primary and  old-growth forests is essential, she said. 

“B.C.  claims to be exploring all emissions reductions opportunities, but they  are not,” she said. “They’re ignoring basically the biggest, best and  cheapest opportunity, which is protecting nature. If we’re going to meet  our climate commitments, keeping primary forests intact is an important  step and what all of us should be asking is, ‘Why are they totally  ignoring this?’ ”