Forests in northern Arizona have a problem: massive piles of wood chips left behind from thinning projects. They can’t stay in the forest because of the fire danger and there’s no local market for them. But they have to go somewhere.
A new experiment is testing the idea of burning the wood chips along with coal to generate electricity. It’s not easy to do, but if contractors can sell wood chips to power plants, that could speed up forest restoration.
A wood chipper roars to life on Observatory Mesa west of Flagstaff.
Logs, branches and pine needles go in one end of the machine and a cascade of flakes pours out the other.
“You can almost think of this right now as a construction site in progress,” said Matt Millar, operations manager for the Flagstaff Watershed Protection Project, a local effort to thin forests around Flagstaff and prevent catastrophic wildfires.
On Observatory Mesa, Millar said, “All the cutting of the trees has been done, the valuable part of the tree removed off site by our contractor, and what you have leftover is the residual slash.”
Slash isn’t valuable to anyone. Lumber mills don’t want it. It’s waste wood, not good enough for houses or tables or even pallets.
Millar said contractors aren’t eager to take on restoration work because it creates a lot of slash and all they can do is burn it or turn it into wood chips.
“The market for wood chips … Well, there really is very little market for wood chips,” he said.
These particular wood chips are headed to the Coronado Generating Station in eastern Arizona. Managers at the power plant are running an experiment to see if they can mix wood with coal. The idea is to create a use for this useless material and speed up forest restoration.
Kris Pringle is the engineer in charge of the test, which began Oct. 26 and continued through this week. “The day of the test, I gotta admit, I was so excited!” Pringle said.
At the plant, a conveyor belt rumbles by loaded with coal. A chute adds a sprinkle of wood chips on top.
This material is crushed and then burned to generate electricity.
Pringle said the size of the wood chips has been a problem. Even after extra chipping and crushing, they look like flakes of oatmeal.
“It’s so different than coal,” he said. Coal crushes into fine powder, unlike wood, which clogs up the equipment.
Bruce Hallin said it’s not the ideal fuel, but that’s not really the point. Hallin is director of water supply for the Salt River Project, which owns the power plant. He planned the experiment because he wants to protect the Phoenix area’s water supply, which is harmed by massive wildfires and the flooding that often follows.
“The overall goal here is to ensure we have healthy forests, and by ensuring we have healthy forests, we have that healthy watershed,” Hallin said.
Hallin said he hopes the experiment, if it continues, will encourage logging companies to take on restoration work. But, he admits, it’s expensive to truck wood chips long distances.
Hallin estimated that it cost maybe twice as much to burn a ton of wood chips in the test compared to a ton of coal.
“The issue is, can we get supply to this facility because we just don’t have the industry in place," Hallin said. "So we’re almost getting the cart before the horse."
If the test goes well, the power plant could potentially chew through some 1,700 truckloads of wood chips a year.
That’s a big deal to people like Henry Provencio, the innovations and efficiencies coordinator for the Four Forest Restoration Initiative (4FRI). It’s a huge federal project to restore forests in northern Arizona that aims to thin 50,000 acres a year.
That leaves behind a lot of slash, and Provencio’s job is to figure out what to do with it.
“We’ve got such a huge challenge in front of us,” he said. “If we’re talking about thinning a million acres over the course of 20 years … it needs to go somewhere, and to generate electricity seems like a natural fit for us.”
A natural fit, but not an easy one.