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Mount Wachusett
Community College is dedicated to promoting and demonstrating
the role of forest biomass as a sustainable renewable
energy source. The college broke ground in April 2002
for the construction of a new wood biomass heating
system that came on line for the 2002-03 heating season,
replacing the current all electric system. This
new system is saving the college an estimated $300,000
per year. A second phase of the project will see
the installation of a biomass cogeneration system that
will provide both heat, air conditioning, and electricity. Please
see the story of the Mount
Wachusett Community College Biomass Conversion Project,
and the Mount
Wachusett Community College CHP project.
Wood Biomass Energy
Definition: Wood (solid wood, tree trimmings, wood chips, sawdust,
bark, and shavings) used to produce heating, electricity,
or other forms of energy.
Wood has been utilized as a fuel since
the beginning of civilization and it is still the main
source of energy in many developing nations. Many homes in our region are equipped with fireplaces or wood
stoves. Modern
biomass energy, however, is similar to these traditional
systems only in that they all use wood as a fuel. Tremendous
technological advances over the past few decades are
now resulting in wood biomass energy systems that are
clean, efficient, and economical. Biomass is rapidly emerging as a locally
produced alternative to fossil fuels.
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Wood Biomass Energy is:
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Renewable: Utilizing the principles of scientific
forest management our forests can provide a continuous
and sustainable yield of wood biomass. Biomass
systems also can utilize tree trimmings, industrial
waste wood, and wood from demolition and construction
wastes, materials that are currently burdening our
landfills and waste systems.
-
Clean: Biomass use reduces the buildup of greenhouse
gases and can also have a positive effect on gases
in the atmosphere that cause acid rain and are damaging
to human health.
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Economical: Biomass comes from local resources and
keeps energy dollars close to home. Money
spent on oil and gas are a huge drain on local economies. When a community uses biomass it creates
forestry and agricultural jobs in the surrounding
region.
A description of the College's conversion
project is available and will be updated periodically. We have also prepared a report providing
a three-year analysis of the Athol-Royalston
Regional School District Wood Energy Heating Conversion
Project.
Building on the College's
successful biomass conversion project, Mount Wachusett
Community College is embarking on other renewable
energy projects and initiatives.
United
Kingdom Partnership
In
January 2005, Mount Wachusett Community College hosted
a nine member team of biomass energy and forestry experts
from the United Kingdom.Team members were selected
to bring together a range of relevant expertise and
background including:
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Large-scale (UK Forestry Commission) and small-scale
foresters with particular experience in the woodfuel
market
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A woodfuel processing equipment manufacturer and
importer
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An academic representing training, and evaluation
and dissemination of best practice
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A representative of regional woodfuel initiative
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An expert on standards and quality assurance in
solid biofuels
The task of the mission was to identify whether there
are procedures or equipment being used in the USA that
could help to make the harvesting, handling, processing,
distribution, delivery or storage of wood for heating
and energy applications more efficient and/or cost
effective in the UK.
Team
members spent a cold week in New England investigating:
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Mechanized harvesting of hardwoods
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Felling methods
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Equipment preferences
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Chipper technologies
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Handling of timber and chips
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Transport, logistics, delivery and storage of chips
The very successful mission lead to a comprehensive final
report and Rob
Rizzo delivering a presentation on Biomass
Energy in New England at Coventry England in
May 2005.
The following is
a short list of renewable energy presentations delivered by
Rob Rizzo:
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Northeast Sustainable Energy Association Building
Energy 2007, Boston, MA, March 15, 2007, Small
Modular Biomass Gasification
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Northeast Energy and Commerce Association, March 1, 2007, Newton, MA, New England Biomass Projects: Successful Renewable Energy Project Development in New England
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Densification
of Woody Biomass for Gasification Feedstock poster
presented at Bioenergy
2005, Jyvaskyla, Finland September 2005
-
A
Brief Look at Biomass Energy in the Northeastern
United States presented to US Embassy
Officiers in Helsinki Finland September 2005
A
short list of reports, charts and other useful biomass
energy information:
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