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SAF 3/3/09 1 Potential Biomass Demand Impact on Forest Markets and Resources Bob Abt NC State University bob_abt@ncsu.edu
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SAF 3/3/09 Context Forest resource modeler focused on regional outlooks for the medium run 5-20 years. Usually take current inventory, growth, and removals as a starting point – Then look at the impact of various demand scenarios 2
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SAF 3/3/09 AF&PA 1/14/0933
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SAF 3/3/09 44
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Bioenergy Approach The challenge of projecting emerging bio-energy markets A few unknowns: which technologies, using which feedstocks, at what scale, where, and when ? 5
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SAF 3/3/09 6 Key Factors Examined Demand for wood as an energy source Potential (policy driven) Observed (“announcements” are observed many actual plants are potential) What would a woody biomass supply curve look like? How important are logging residuals? Determines timing and size of impact on roundwood markets
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SAF 3/3/09 Outline Policy Driven Scale Implied by NC RPS Implied by national RFS “regionalized” Relative to Logging Residuals The Relationship between Residuals and Roundwood Feedstock Supply Announced Capacity Regional Case Study Role of Residuals Impact on Economic / Physical Sustainability Impact on Traditional Forest Based Industry 7
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SAF 3/3/09 8 NC RPS Impact
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SAF 3/3/09 9 NC RPS Impact
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SAF 3/3/09 10 Potential Impact of RFS Christopher Galik - Duke
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SAF 3/3/09 11 Biomass Supply Curves
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SAF 3/3/09 12 Gulf Coast Biomass Impact Demand (2008) from F&W Forestry 3 new plants 15 proposed or under consideration Emphasis on pine Potential demand of 5.75 mill green tons annually
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SAF 3/3/09 AF&PA 1/14/0913 Gulf Coast Biomass Impact Demand Scenario.5%/yr demand increase for current products Over 10 yr period (2007 – 2016) increase demand by.575 mill tons/yr 100% pine Reduce demand by available logging residuals (45%,35%,25%,15% recovery)
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SAF 3/3/09 14 Where is the wood now – where will it be in 20 years
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SAF 3/3/09 AF&PA 1/14/0915 Gulf Coast PPW Removals
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SAF 3/3/09 16 Demand Increase
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SAF 3/3/09 17 Price/Harvest/Inventory Impact No Roundwood Biomass Demand Max Roundwood Biomass Demand
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SAF 3/3/09 18 Higher Prices and Lower Inventory Reduce Harvest
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SAF 3/3/09 19 What if biomass demand is not price responsive?
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SAF 3/3/09 20 Caveats “Worst Case Scenario” for traditional wood- users or “Best Case” if you are a timberland owner Everything being considered adds to demand Biomass demand perfectly inelastic (no short run substitutes) No silvicultural response, energy crops, or non-wood substitution
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SAF 3/3/09 21 Caveats On the other hand: Power companies already negotiating long term supply agreements New projects announced monthly Current roundwood prices are very attractive These runs don’t include timberland loss (1.5%/yr) Plantation plantings are down significantly
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SAF 3/3/09 22 Market-Sustainability Residuals could be important but current demand will quickly exceed residual availability Inelastic timber supply means that there will likely be a higher price than harvest response Energy and biofuel firms are looking at roundwood first Resulting higher wood prices may make other renewable energy sources look better and reduce “realized” biomass demand Timing - this is the transition period – recession for traditional forest product industries – boom for bio-energy – makes roundwood use more attractive
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SAF 3/3/09 23 Policy Expansive policies focused on demand and technology Restrictive policies focused on supply (e.g. certification, natural stands, residuals) Not a good combination, will likely lead to unanticipated policy “leakage” Incentives and outcomes will result from interaction of energy, forest, agriculture, environmental, and carbon policy
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SAF 3/3/09 24 QUESTIONS
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