Got even more wood ?

February 3, 2010

So DECC has launched a consultation document package for its Renewable Heat Initiative (RHI)
Lots of good stuff in there, but the bit that I’d like to comment on is the incentivisation of wood chip/wood pellets for domestic heating.
Feel free to correct me if I’m wrong but to me this provision looks like a commitment to an effective long term taxation of the rural poor. Its a bit counter-intuitive at first sight, after all how could an incentive to use local renewable biomass result in higher bills ? Well, its all to do with having a limited land package available to provide that biomass.

There is a distinction in the consultation between biomass that originates from wood, that which comes from grown for energy crops and that which is the result of existing agricultural processes (such as straw), but what concerns me is the interaction between existing managed woodland and possible new energy crops such as mycanthus and willow. The problem is that the RHI incentives only relate to pellet or chip burning boilers effectively replacing fossil-fuel burning boilers and central heating. Standing hardwood doesn’t make economic sense for pelletisation or chipping, its wears the machinery and takes more time and energy to produce and harvest.

What the consultation leaves out (and I can’t find mentioned anywhere in the document package) is the economic impact on existing wood users and those who cannot replace boilers. In other words me !
My situation is as follows: I live in a little village in Cornwall that is a good 10km from the nearest gas main. Most houses in the village use coal or wood to supplement Economy-7 electric heating. In many ways its a typical granite-built miners village. No cellars, very little outside space, houses are well over 100 years old (so low ceilings) and built of thick solid stone walls. Speaking for myself only; I don’t have a boiler, just an immersion heater that I turn on if and when I need hot water. I don’t have central heating, just a single electric storage heater that is powered by Economy-7 over-night. I rent the cottage and have only a small amount of space outside. I am not unusual in this county.

What I do have is a nice big fireplace that I can settle down in front of in the evening. I burn wood in that grate and buy my wood from local suppliers or one of the many local shops who sell 5kg bags of split logs over the counter.

My concern is that if pelletised or chipped wood becomes a lucrative product, managed woodland in the area will shift towards those products and away from larger trunked species suitable for splitting and domestic use. It’ll take time, I don’t expect to see the price that I pay for wood to rocket overnight, but the house that I live in will be around for at least another 100 years so the issue is not gong to go away. Over the 20-50 year timescale, by shifting the forestry from bulk wood to processed chip you will see a price differential mount that penalises those living in houses that cannot be physically altered to accommodate pellet burning boilers. These houses are generally smaller, cheaper and occupied by those less able to cope with price rises. Effectively this is an incentive that will put the rural poor at a greater disadvantage than ever.

I like the idea of increasing biomass use as I previously stated in Got Wood ?, but this particular policy seems poorly devised.


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