Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

The Daily Score


Forests Fired II

Posted by Eric de Place
Can fire-prevention thinning help solve the energy crunch?

Increasingly, conservationists are pushing for timber thinning on federal land as a means of ecological restoration and fire-fuel reduction. In Oregon, roughly 5.6 million acres need thinning, more than any other state.

Unfortunately, most of the thinned timber is being wasted--simply piled and burned. Luckily, new technologies that convert biomass to usable energy, can perhaps begin to offset the Northwest's dependence on expensive fossil fuel imports. One of the big upsides of biomass is that it would keep money circulating locally, rather than pumping it to North Slope oil corporations.

At present, unfortunately, biomass energy in Oregon hasn't caught fire because producers are worried that there won't be a steady and predictable supply of thinned timber. Of course, that's exactly what has environmentalists worried too. Obviously, it's a shame to waste natural resources and money, but many conservationists are equally worried that biomass energy could unleash a demand for federal timber that could outlive the thinning projects and exert harvesting pressure on national forests far into the future.

Read all about it in today's Oregonian. 



Comments
There are no comments yet.

Add a Comment

Name (required)
Email (will not be published) (required)
Website
See a list of html tags you can use in your comment.
(required)
This check is used to prevent comments by spammers.


Sightline Daily brought to you by Sightline Institute.

ORGANIZATION'S NAME GOES HERE!!! It will be hidden by CSS; we need it only for hCard compliance.
1402 Third Avenue, Suite 500 | Seattle, Washington 98101 | tel: +1.206.447.1880 | fax: +1.206.447.2270