CRS Report Released: Is Biopower Carbon Neutral?
by Taryn Rucinski
Congress
has expressed interest in biopower—electricity generated from biomass.
Biopower, a baseload power source, has the potential to strengthen rural
economies, enhance energy security, and improve the environment,
proponents say. Biopower could be produced from a large range of biomass
feedstocks nationwide (e.g., urban, agricultural, and forestry wastes
and residues). One challenge to biopower production is a readily
available feedstock supply. At present, biopower requires tax incentives
to be competitive with conventional fossil fuels. If Congress considers
a renewable electricity standard or other measures (e.g., farm bill
energy programs) that include biopower, there may be concerns about the
carbon neutrality of biopower. Congressional support for biopower has
aimed to promote energy diversity and improve energy security, and has
generally assumed that biopower is carbon neutral. An energy production
activity is typically classified as carbon neutral if it produces no net
increase in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions on a life-cycle basis. The
premise that biopower is carbon neutral has come under scrutiny as its
potential to help meet U.S. energy demands and reduce U.S. greenhouse
gas emissions is more closely examined.
Whether
biopower is carbon neutral depends on many factors, including the
definition of carbon neutrality, the feedstock type, the technology
used, and the time frame examined. Carbon flux (emission and
sequestration) varies at each phase of the biopower pathway, given site-
and operation-specific factors. A life-cycle assessment (LCA) is a
common technique to calculate the environmental footprint, including the
carbon flux, of a particular biopower pathway. However, past
legislation has not required a standardized LCA.
Interest
in the carbon classification of biopower is in part due to
sustainability and air quality concerns. Where the feedstock supply for
biopower originates, if it is managed in a sustainable manner, and
whether the associated air quality impacts from biopower generation are
tolerable are questions that are part of the biopower carbon-neutrality
debate. Congress may decide whether the current carbon-neutral
designation for biopower is accurate, or whether additional carbon
accounting for biopower is warranted and what impact this accounting
might have on renewable energy, agricultural, and environmental
legislative goals.
Rulings
by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have raised questions about
the carbon neutrality of biopower. For instance, the 2010 Prevention of
Significant Deterioration and Title V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule did
not exempt emissions from biomass combustion. Some view EPA’s decision
as equating biomass emissions with fossil fuel emissions. EPA decided in
2011 to defer for three years GHG permitting requirements for carbon
dioxide emissions from bioenergy and other biogenic stationary sources
in order to conduct a detailed examination of the science associated
with these emissions. EPA’s Scientific Advisory Board conducted an
independent review of the agency’s biogenic accounting framework and
released its findings in September 2012. The board acknowledged the
“daunting task” of assessing the greenhouse gas implications of
bioenergy, and the “narrow regulatory boundaries” within EPA’s purview
that limit the consideration of greenhouse gas flux at various points
along the bioenergy pathway.
State
perspectives on the tailoring rule are divided. Some states contend
that treating biomass combustion the same as fossil fuel combustion will
result in excessive permitting requirements and fees that jeopardize
renewable energy development. Other states argue that not treating it
the same will aggravate climate change over time.
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