April 12, 2023
Journal Article

Climate and air pollution impacts of generating biopower from forest management residues in California

Abstract

California faces crisis conditions on its forested landscapes. A century of aggressive logging and fire suppression in combination with conditions exacerbated by climate change have created an ongoing ecological, economic, and public health emergency. Between commercial harvests on California’s working forestlands and the increasing number of acres the state treats each year for fire risk reduction and carbon sequestration, California forests generate millions of tons of woody residues annually – residues that are typically left or burned in the field. State policymakers have turned to biomass electricity generation as a key market for woody biomass in the hope that it can support sustainable forest management activities while also providing low-carbon renewable electricity. However, open questions surrounding the climate and air pollution performance of electricity generation from woody biomass have made it difficult to determine how best to manage the risks and opportunities posed by forest residues. The California Biomass Residue Emissions Characterization (C-BREC) model offers a spatially-explicit life cycle assessment framework to rigorously and transparently establish the climate and air pollution impacts of biopower from forest residues in California under current technological, infrastructural, and ecological conditions. The C-BREC model characterizes the variable emissions from different biomass supply chains as well as the counterfactual emissions from prescribed burn, wildfire, and decay avoided by residue mobilization. We find that the life cycle “carbon footprint” of biopower from woody residues generated by recent forest treatments in California ranges widely—from comparable with solar photovoltaic (PV) on the low end to comparable with natural gas on the high end. This variation stems largely from the heterogeneity in the fire and decay conditions these residues would encounter if left in the field, with utilization of residue that would otherwise have been burned in place offering the best climate and air quality performance. California’s energy and forest management policies should account for this variation to ensure desired climate benefits are achieved.

Published: April 12, 2023

Citation

Fingerman K., J. Qiriazi, C. Barrientos, M. Blasdel, J. Comnick, A. Harris, and C. Geronimo, et al. 2023. Climate and air pollution impacts of generating biopower from forest management residues in California. Environmental Research Letters 18, no. 3:Art. No.034038. PNNL-SA-181290. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/acbd93

Research topics