(1)
The department may develop and implement forest biomass energy
demonstration projects, one east of the crest of the Cascade
mountains and one west of the crest of the Cascade mountains.
The demonstration projects must be designed to:
(a) Reveal the utility of Washington's public and private
forest biomass feedstock;
(b) Create green jobs and generate renewable energy;
(c) Generate revenues or improve asset values for
beneficiaries of state lands and state forest lands;
(d) Improve forest health, reduce pollution, and restore
ecological function; and
(e) Avoid interfering with the current working area for
forest biomass collection surrounding an existing fixed location
biomass energy production site.
(2) To develop and implement the forest biomass energy
demonstration projects, the department may form forest biomass
energy partnerships or cooperatives.
(3) The forest biomass energy partnerships or cooperatives
are encouraged to be public-private partnerships focused on
convening the entities necessary to grow, harvest, process,
transport, and utilize forest biomass to generate renewable
energy. Particular focus must be given to recruiting and
employing emerging technologies that can locally process forest
biomass feedstock to create local green jobs and reduce
transportation costs.
(4) The forest biomass energy partnerships or cooperatives
may include, but are not limited to: Entrepreneurs or
organizations developing and operating emerging technology to
process forest biomass; industrial electricity producers;
contractors capable of providing the local labor needed to
collect, process, and transport forest biomass feedstocks;
tribes; federal land management agencies; county, city, and other
local governments; the *department of community, trade, and
economic development; state trust land managers; an organization
dedicated to protecting and strengthening the jobs, rights, and
working conditions of Washington's working families; accredited
research institution representatives; an industrial timber land
manager; a small forest landowner; and a not-for-profit
conservation organization.
[2009 c 163 § 2.]
NOTES:
*Reviser's note: The "department of community, trade, and economic development" was renamed the "department of commerce" by 2009 c 565.
Findings -- Intent -- 2009 c 163: "The legislature finds that
forest biomass is an abundant and renewable by-product of
Washington's forest land management. Forest biomass can be
utilized to generate clean renewable energy.
In some Washington forests, residual forest biomass is
burned on site or left to decompose. The lack of forest products
markets in some areas means that standing forest biomass removed
for forest health and wildfire risk reduction treatments must
occur at substantial cost. Utilizing forest biomass to generate
energy can reduce the greenhouse gases emitted by burning forest
biomass.
The legislature further finds that the emerging forest
biomass energy economy is challenged by: Not having a reliable
supply of predictably priced forest biomass feedstock; shipping
and processing costs; insufficient forest biomass processing
infrastructure; and feedstock demand.
The legislature finds that making use of the state's forest
biomass resources for energy production may generate new revenues
or increase asset values of state lands and state forest lands,
protect forest land of all ownerships from severe forest health
problems, stimulate Washington's economy, create green jobs, and
reduce Washington's dependence on foreign oil.
It is the intent of the legislature to support forest
biomass demonstration projects that employ promising processing
technologies. The demonstration projects must emphasize public
and private forest biomass feedstocks that are generated as
by-products of current forest practices. The project must reveal
ways to overcome the current impediments to the developing forest
biomass energy economy, and ways to realize ecologically
sustainable outcomes from that development." [2009 c 163 § 1.]