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Showing posts with label Biomass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biomass. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Biomass Plants to Boost Rural Georgia

A power company that serves four million Georgians is investing in renewable energy by building two biomass plants in the state. For two rural communities in south Georgia, it's a boost to the

Oglethorpe Power plans to build biomass plants in Appling and Warren Counties. The company hopes to break ground by 2011 pending state permits. Officials estimate it will create 250 temporary construction jobs at each site.

Once built, each plant would be fueled by wood and employ about 40 people. It would have a ripple effect on the local economy, says Dale Atkins with the Appling County Development Authority. "It's going to have a tremendous impact on our forest industry. Timber land is 70 percent in the county... this will create 500 jobs in the forest industry."

These counties were chosen in part because they are wood baskets. Company officials say the plants should come on line by 2015, and they're considering a third site in Echols County..


Thursday, December 25, 2008

Lagrange planning biomass power station

In western Georgia, Lagrange and Troup County officials are planning a biomass power station to generate electricity.

The $170 million dollar plant would burn wood pellets, brush and similar woody waste materials.

25 people would work at the facility, which would bring in some $2 million dollars in local taxes annually. Officials say the 50 megawatt plant would supply enough power for 25,000 homes.

The plant's builders, Rollcast, want to sell the electricity to Georgia Power and Oglethorpe Power. The plant is one of several at various stages of operation, construction or planning statewide.

The Georgia Forestry Commission estimates the state can produce some 19 million tons of forestry-related biomass annually.

Officials hope to have the facility up and running by 2012.

Click here for more GPB News about biomass plants.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Ga. Power applying for biomass plant permits


Plant Mitchell. (Dave Bender)


Georgia Power Company wants to trade in coal for woodchips to fuel a power plant near Albany. The company is investing in bio mass technology with the hope of saving money.

While bio mass is considered a cleaner fuel source compared to coal, Georgia Power believes it could also be a cheaper solution for producing electricity.

Plant Mitchell turbine area: only one of the facilities three yellow turbines is operational. (Dave Bender)


On a tour of Plant Mitchell in nearby Albany, manager Ronnie Walston explains that Georgia’s millions of acres of forests could be used to power energy producing turbines.

Plant Mitchell water boilers. Coal or wood biomass is heated at the bottom. (Dave Bender)

Currently, the company is experimenting by burning wood chips and similar waste products instead of coal to heat water in the plant's three–story-high boilers. Walston, shouting over the roar of steam turbines in the background:

“The generator takes high-pressure steam from the boiler, turns the generator which delivers 155 megawatts of electrical energy to the grid in Georgia.”
The generator consumes a whopping 62-tons of coal an hour.

Plant Mitchell: Rail cars delivering coal at a siding. (Dave Bender)

After the conversion, the plant would require 160-trucks a day to haul in a million tons of wood chips. While using wood cuts the electrical output by a third, it’s enough to power an estimated 90,000 homes.

Walston says the conversion would keep the plant - which now buys its coal from Appalachia - running for years to come and help the local economy:
“…those dollars now flow out of state. Now, with the biomass – that’s currently not being utilized – will be purchased and consumed here within a 100-mile radius of Plant Mitchell, and so those dollars that previously went out of state will be staying in-state and will create some 50-to-75 jobs in the fuel-harvesting area.”
If successful, the bio mass conversion could happen in 2012.

Control panel at Plant Mitchell. (Dave Bender)

The plan still needs approval from the Environmental Protection Division and the Public Service Commission. A recent study by Oregon state officials show bio mass can cost up to 6.7 per kilowatt hour to produce.

Forbes Magazine ranks Georgia as the third best state in the nation for alternative energy from biomass. The article referenced the amount of privately owned forest in Georgia, more than any other state in the country, as a reason for the state’s ranking. The ranking comes on the heels of CNBC’s including Georgia in the top ten and second in the Southeast in its annual rankings of “America’s Top States for Business.”

EPA estimates show Georgian's pay 6.5 cents for coal produced electricity. The cost of biomass is expected to drop as technologies improve and more plants come online.

Click here for more GPB News coverage about biomass and related alternative energy solutions.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Georgia Power submits nuke request

Today Georgia Power asked for state approval on two new nuclear reactors. The Atlanta Business Chronicle reports that Georgia Power's parent company, Southern Company, submitted a request to the Public Service Commission today. The reactors would go up at Plant Vogtle near Waynesboro, south of Augusta. Georgia Power also submitted a proposal to convert a coal-fired plant near Albany to burn renewable biomass wood.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Georgia earns two high rankings

Forbes Magazine ranks Georgia as the third best state in the nation for alternative energy from biomass. The article referenced the amount of privately owned forest in Georgia, more than any other state in the country, as a reason for the state’s ranking. The ranking comes on the heels of CNBC’s including Georgia in the top ten and second in the Southeast in its annual rankings of “America’s Top States for Business.”

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

'Biomass' electricity plant coming to Lamar County

Lamar County officials say a 160-million dollar plant that produces electricity from biomass is on the way to Barnesville. Rollcast Energy plans to build the plant on a 60-thousand square foot tract in the middle Georgia county. Wood waste from logging and land-clearing operations would be burned in the process leading to producing enough electricity for 40-thousand homes. Officials say up to 25 jobs would be created with a 1.5 million dollar payroll.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Biomass plant coming to Heard Co.

Rollcast Energy of Charlotte, NC., says they plan will build a biomass plant in Heard County, in western Georgia.

The plant, named Greenway Renewable Power, will consume old lumber, wood scraps, and other biomass wood waste to produce 50 megawatts, enough energy to supply 13,000 homes, according to Rollcast.

The $150 million facility is slated for completion in 2010, and will be built near Franklin. It is expected to employ around 25 people.

Georgia Power says they plan to buy 100-percent of the plant's output, as part of a 15-year contract with Rollcast.

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