Charities urge the EU to end use of certain Biomass for Energy

Image
Full article can be found at Euronews here. 

A network of over 100 NGOs is calling on the European Union to end using some biomass as renewable energy.

The Forest Defenders Alliance (FDA), an initiative to amplify the voices of NGOs in Europe and countries with forests threatened by EU policies, wants Brussels to protect forests rather than encourage more logging to produce biomass fuel for power plants.

The EU counts biomass fuel as a zero-carbon renewable energy source, but environmentalists want it excluded from this criteria because burning wood emits more carbon pollution than burning coal and regrowing trees, which NGOs say takes decades to centuries to offset the pollution.

The EU still doesn’t have a clear position on the issue, which Finnish MEP Nils Torvalds explains as being because it is a booming industry.

“Well if you look at the different opinions and papers coming out the EU Parliament and the EU Commission, there is not a clear answer, and I think I know why there is not a clean or a clear answer because if you look at a single tree when it’s burned then, of course, it’s CO2, but if you see what’s happening on a global scene, you see that biomass is growing fast,” Torvalds told Euronews.

The FDA also wants to end subsidies for countries that encourage deforestation as part of the bloc’s Renewable Energy Directive.

However, with more than 70 percent of their territories covered by forests, Finland and Sweden are leading the charge in Europe in keeping the nearly €6 billion per year subsidy on biofuel production.

For Lina Burnelius, project leader & international coordinator at Protect the Forest Sweden, biomass energy should not be part of the solution to combatting climate change.

“Burning forest biomass, in comparison with coal, for example, actually increases emissions in the coming decisive decades. We need to lower our emissions, not go from fossil-greenhouse gas emissions to biomass-greenhouse gas emissions,” Burnelius told Euronews.

“Either the EU is ok with continuing down their prevailing line, and start irreversible chain-reactions beyond human control, or they will…do all in their power to decry emissions. It’s not hard – we need policies that create a Europe that looks beyond burning.”

NGOs have called on the EU institutions to discuss the issue during the Brussels Biomass Action Week in mid-November.