For several years, The Columbian has been a big supporter of cutting-edge research and development of biomass technology. Biomass is a modern replacement for the increasingly antiquated burning of fossil fuels to produce energy. (Biomass is a process for burning wood debris and converting it into a power source.) For example, we thought it was a great idea to build a 20-megawatt biomass power plant in Chelatchie Prairie at a former plywood mill site, at least until Clark County commissioners abandoned the proposal last year.
But there is a time and a place for everything. We remain unconvinced that downtown Vancouver is the proper place for the biomass power plant that the county wants to build and use for central heating, cooling and domestic water heating for five county buildings. Fortunately, the city of Vancouver is holding the county’s figurative feet to the fire on this matter. Both sides presented their cases Wednesday to Hearings Examiner Sharon Rice, an attorney from Shoreline who is expected to render a decision within two weeks.
Something else occurred on the biomass front Wednesday, and it carried a powerful, positive impact for Washingtonians. At Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, it was announced that Washington State University and the University of Washington each received $40 million grants to conduct research and develop biofuels and regional renewable-energy markets. U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., described the twin awards by the U.S. Department of Agriculture as “by far the largest of the five public-private partnerships to receive these grants across the nation, a reflection on the pioneering work being done in Washington state.”
Several components of this research bode well for our state. First, the research involves public-private partnerships between the universities and numerous corporate giants in the wood industry such as timber giant Weyerhaeuser and GreenWood Resources of Portland, the largest grower of poplar trees in North America.