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Acknowledgements
Written by James Hewitt
Edited by Ed Fenton
Produced by FERN
July 2011
ISBN 978-1-906607-16-6
The research and publication of this report has been made possible with support from DG
Development and DG Environment of the European Commission. The views in this report are
those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect those of FERN or any of the donors.
FERN, July 2011
This material is offered free of charge for personal and non-commercial use,provided the source is acknowledged. For commercial or any other use, prior writtenpermission must be obtained from FERN. In no case may this material be altered,sold or rented
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List of abbreviations
EU: European Union
FSC: Forest Stewardship Council
NREAP: National Renewable Energy Action Plan
RED: Renewable Energy Directive
RSPO: Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil
RWE volume: roundwood equivalent volume
UK: United Kingdom
USA: United States of America
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Summary
The European Unions (EU) Renewable Energy Directive of 2009 required each MemberState to submit a National Renewable Energy Action Plan by June 2010, to indicate how itwould meet its legally binding 2020 targets for renewable energy. As part of this, MemberStates were asked to provide data about the quantities of solid biomass produceddomestically or imported, and about the energy which might be derived from that biomass.
Analysis of these data and trade statistics reveals that the quantity of wood required to satisfythe 2020 targets is likely to be too large to be met by increased production within the EU.Instead, Member States will have to rely on importing wood products from elsewhere, at therisk of damaging ecosystems in other parts of the world, while actually increasing the EUsown carbon footprint.
Assuming that the mix of product types remains the same, Member States will need to usebetween 50 and 100 per cent more wood than is currently consumed as fuel.
Most of the increase in imports is likely to be for electricity generation, probably in the form ofwood pellets supplied to a small number of large power stations. The most likely sources are
Canada and the USA, and perhaps also Russia (if the risks associated with imports fromRussia do not become prohibitive when the EUs Illegal Timber Regulation is fullyimplemented in 2013).
Production of roundwood in North America fell during the economic downturn at the end ofthe last decade and coincidentally, the shortfall is comparable to the additional volume ofroundwood that will be required to meet the EUs 2020 targets. Therefore, competition forsuitable wood is likely to increase. Sustainability, particularly in the catchment area of largewood pellet plants, may become difficult to maintain if, as is likely, the market for wood fuelwithin North America expands, and also if levels of timber and paper consumption in theregion rebound to their pre-recession level.
The data provided in the Appendix indicates that the increase in Member States use of woodfor fuel will probably be between 100 and 200 million cubic metres and that in most Member
States, the area of productive woodland that currently exists is unlikely to be large enough tomeet the substantial increases in the volume of woody biomass required.
In some Member States it is possible thatchanges in forest management practice could resultin increased supplies of woody biomass,
1
The report concludes that if left unchanged, future flows of biomass from and to the EU risksnot only damaging ecosystems in other parts of the world, but will also increasing the EUsown carbon footprint.
but this would take years (given the time it takes fortrees to grow) and might not be consistent with sustainable forestry practices.
1Much of the woodland in Germany is said to be over-mature.
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This report assesses the consumption of wood-based products in the context of the NationalRenewable Energy Action Plans (NREAPs) which EU Member States have prepared to showhow they intend to meet targets set by the European Commission to ensure that 20 per centof EU-wide energy consumption derives from renewable energy by 2020. It does so with
reference to other forms of biomass.
1 - Introduction
Unfortunately, these NREAPs are an insufficient policy response to the increasing urgencywith which deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions associated with consumption must bemade worldwide (except by those whose carbon footprint is minimal) if the target
2
It is unclear how the NREAPs would be affected by changes in subsidies and taxation
to whichgovernments around the world have committed themselves is to be met. Given the gas andparticulate emissions attributable to the life cycle of wood fuel (from planting to extraction,processing, transporting and disposal), wood-based fuel is not carbon-neutral.
3
The sources of fuel described in the NREAPs include solid biomass. However, most of the
NREAPs give little indication of the extent to which wood-based products either in generalor as specific products contribute to the energy anticipated from solid biomass. Nor do theydiscuss the differences in energy content or probable sources of the components of that solidbiomass.
orindeed by changes in other input costs (particularly transportation), the price of alternativefuels (especially fossil fuel) and competition for raw material with alternative end-uses.
Firewood and charcoal are, and wood chips, mill residues, wood pellets and logs can be,produced specifically for use as fuel. This report refers to these six products as primarywoody biomass.
4
Particularly if traded, wood chips, mill residues and logs tend to be used as raw material for
making pulp, panels such as particleboard or, in the case of logs, other products. Sawdust isthe ingredientof first choice for wood pellets, provided that its raw material is consistent andhomogenous.
The term woody biomass comprises all these products but also includesthe wooden products (including furniture but excluding pulp, paper and fuel) which are madefrom them. Some, perhaps much, primary woody biomass derives from sources such asprivate gardens which are not included in national statistics of roundwood production, andwhich are unlikely to be traded.
5
The end-use of these products is not apparent from national statistics, and is likely to varyaccording to local expedients and changes in price and demand.
At the end of its life in service, wood (if it is not prohibitively contaminated) canbe used as fuel.
This report considers the production and trade in firewood, wood chips, mill residues, woodpellets and logs, and compares this with the trade in all wood-based products. This datafocuses on the EU and the countries which have potential as suppliers of wood-based fuel.The figures alone, however, do not reveal whether the timberland being used to meetincreased demand is being managed in a sustainable way.
Increased quantities of woody biomass are likely to be used primarily either with coal in a
small number of large power stations (as in Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands and theUnited Kingdom (UK), or widely as domestic or district heating (as in Austria, Finland andSweden).
2Ensuring that global average temperature does not exceed 2C above pre-industrial levels.3Sweden is progressively taxing fossil fuels in order to become independent of such fuel by 2020.http://www.svebio.se/?p=7264Solid direct and indirect supplies Section 2a Joint Wood Energy Enquiry 2008 Background Data AnalysisUNECE Timber Section (03 2009)http://timber.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/meetings/jwee2-data-report-24march.pdf.5If kept dry, pellets tend to be regarded as superior to wood chips particularly because they have a greater energycontent per unit of weight than chips. However, energy is expended in drying their wood raw material.
http://www.svebio.se/?p=726http://www.svebio.se/?p=726http://timber.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/meetings/jwee2-data-report-24march.pdfhttp://timber.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/meetings/jwee2-data-report-24march.pdfhttp://timber.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/meetings/jwee2-data-report-24march.pdfhttp://timber.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/meetings/jwee2-data-report-24march.pdfhttp://www.svebio.se/?p=7268/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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2
The NREAPs which EU Member States have prepared are meant to include separate,standardised estimates of how much solid biomass they consumed during 2006, and howmuch they anticipate consuming during 2015 and 2020, both as primary woody biomass andas other biomass. Each NREAP includes a schedule of the quantity of energy which the
Member State anticipates generating for electricity, and separately for heating and cooling.
National Renewable Energy Action Plans
Unfortunately there is much scope for error when converting statistics from one unit ofmeasurement to another (such as from energy to roundwood equivalent volume),
6
This, coupled with inconsistencies
particularlyfor aggregates of products as different as thinnings and wood pellets.
7
Separate data sources
and omissions in the statistics, makes it unwise to drawfirm conclusions about the physical quantity of woody biomass which the NREAPs anticipate.However, the quantity used in generating electricity from solid biomass within the EU is likelyto double between 2010 and 2020, while the quantity used (perhaps independently fromelectricity generation) for heating and cooling will increase by about 50 per cent.
8
As the data provided in the Appendix indicates, that increase is probably between 100 and200 million cubic metres. This is the same order of magnitude as the amount by whichproduction of roundwood in Canada and the USA declined during the second half of lastdecade (see Chart 7).
tend to confirm the scale of additional woody biomass which may berequired within the next ten years or so.
The increase for France, Germany and the UK would be between about 20 and 30 millioncubic metres each. It would be between 10 and 20 million cubic metres each for Belgium,Italy, the Netherlands and Spain.
The increase in consumption anticipated for electricity generation tends to be much largerthan that for heating and cooling. Given that just a few utility companies and opportunistdevelopers of power projects
9will account for most of that increase, it is imperative that they
make commitments (to the relevant planning authorities) to ensure that the (wood) fuel fortheir new power stations derives from sustainably managed sources.
10
In most EU Member States, the area of productive woodland that currently exists is unlikely tobe large enough to meet the substantial increases in the volume of woody biomass required.In some Member States it is possible thatchanges in forest management practice could resultin increased supplies of woody biomass,
11but this would take years (given the time it takes
for trees to grow) and might not be consistent with sustainable forestry practices.Discrepancies between what is likelyto be feasible and what national plans hope to achievehave been apparent for some time.
12
6Roundwood equivalent volume (abbreviated herein as RWE volume) is a unit of measure which represents thevolume of logs (i.e. roundwood) from which a given quantity of wood-based products derives.7Particularly concerning units of measure and in converting between different units of measure.8Amongst the most rigorous of these is a study by U. Mantau et al., Real potential for changes in growth and use ofEU forests for EU wood (06 2010)http://ec.europa.eu/energy/renewables/studies/doc/bioenergy/euwood_final_report.pdf9For example MTG in the UKhttp://www.mgtpower.com/10A number of agrofuel power projects which might use palm oil as their primary fuel have been proposed in theUK. The planning approval process tends to be less rigorous concerning sustainability and legality than it should be (-the legality of products certified under the RSPO is not assured).11Much of the woodland in Germany is said to be over-mature.12Final paragraph, p. v, Wood resources availability and demands implications of renewable energy policies. A firstglance at 2005, 2010 and 2020 in European countries. UNECE, 19 October 2007http://www.unece.org/timber/docs/tc-sessions/tc-65/policyforum/Wood_availability_and_demand.pdf
http://ec.europa.eu/energy/renewables/studies/doc/bioenergy/euwood_final_report.pdfhttp://ec.europa.eu/energy/renewables/studies/doc/bioenergy/euwood_final_report.pdfhttp://www.mgtpower.com/http://www.mgtpower.com/http://www.mgtpower.com/http://www.unece.org/timber/docs/tc-sessions/tc-65/policyforum/Wood_availability_and_demand.pdfhttp://www.unece.org/timber/docs/tc-sessions/tc-65/policyforum/Wood_availability_and_demand.pdfhttp://www.unece.org/timber/docs/tc-sessions/tc-65/policyforum/Wood_availability_and_demand.pdfhttp://www.mgtpower.com/http://ec.europa.eu/energy/renewables/studies/doc/bioenergy/euwood_final_report.pdf8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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3 EU trade with countries outside the EU13
Chart 1 The EUs imports of primary woody biomass from outside the EU (by importingcountry)
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As Chart 1 indicates, the Netherlands consumes about 35 per cent of the wood pelletsimported by the EU. Towards the end of 2010, Belgium, Denmark and Sweden each
accounted for a further 10 per cent of the total. By contrast most of the firewood, wood chipsand other residues are imported by Finland, Italy and Sweden.
The weight of wood pellets and mill residues imported by the EU has tended to increase moreslowly than imports of wood chips. However, the increase in imports of pellets since mid-2010is attributable primarily to imports by the UK.
During 2010, the energycontent of this trade would have been in the order of 150 petajoulesand 40 terawatt hours.
14
The EU is said to be responsible for the consumption of the great majority of globa l woodpellet production roughly 80 per cent of approximately 10 million tonnes during 2009.
15
The commercial viability of wood-pellet stoves and wood-pellet power stations i s affected bythe difference in price of alternative fuels if these are used in competing facilities.
16
13This section is based on data published by Eurostat (CN8, monthly)
The use of
pellets would increase if it were commercially viable to torrefy them.
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/January 2009 is the first month for which the source published data under heading (HS code) 44013020, which iswhy the charts in this section do not cover prior time periods. Commentators interpret that heading as referringexclusively to wood pellets, although the word pellet is not included in the official description.The letters yt before dates on the x-axis of the charts is an abbreviation for year to for example, yt 31-12-2010refers to the twelve month period 01-01-2010 to 31-12-2010 and yt 30-06-2009 refers to the twelve months from 01-07-2008 to 30-06-2009. Presenting data in this way smoothes out intra-monthly and seasonal variations.14Assuming the following (somewhat notional factors) in giga joules per tonne: 12 (firewood, wood chips, millresidues and logs), 18 (wood pellets). 1petajoule = 10^15 joules = 277 gigawatt hour.15http://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdf
A second source suggests EU consumption amounted to 80% of 12 million tonnes of pellets during 2008 Slide 3http://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-12-06%20g%20murray%20northern%20pellet%20symposiu.pdf16Final two paragraphs, section 3, of the report by Don Roberts (2007) Convergence of the Fuel, Food and FiberMarkets: A Forest Sector Perspectivehttp://www.fs.fed.us/global/forum/dec07/Roberts_Fuel_Food_Fiber_Markets.doc
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-12-06%20g%20murray%20northern%20pellet%20symposiu.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-12-06%20g%20murray%20northern%20pellet%20symposiu.pdfhttp://www.fs.fed.us/global/forum/dec07/Roberts_Fuel_Food_Fiber_Markets.dochttp://www.fs.fed.us/global/forum/dec07/Roberts_Fuel_Food_Fiber_Markets.dochttp://www.fs.fed.us/global/forum/dec07/Roberts_Fuel_Food_Fiber_Markets.dochttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-12-06%20g%20murray%20northern%20pellet%20symposiu.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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4 - Trade between EU Member States17
Chart 4 Intra-EU imports of primary woody biomass (by importing country)
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Chart 5 Intra-EU exports of primary woody biomass (by exporting country)
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17This section is based on data published by Eurostat (CN8, monthly)http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/January 2009 is the first month for which the source published data under heading (HS code) 44013020.Commentators interpret that heading as referring exclusively to wood pellets (although the word pellet is not includedin the official description).
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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This section assesses trends in the volume of roundwood extracted from timberland in thecountries which currently supply the great majority of the EUs imports of primary woodybiomass.
5 - Production and trade in roundwood
20
Chart 7 Production of roundwood in selected regions
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Chart 7 shows that the production of roundwood in Europe was much the same in 2009 as ithad been in the first half of that decade. By contrast, production in North America declined
steeply during the second half of the decade, particularly of logs for the timber sector.
Residues from the milling of logs for the paper sector tend already to be utilised as bioenergy,particularly as fuel (notably black liquor) for the paper mills themselves and their neighbouringareas. Similarly, some sawmills derive their energy from the residues which they produce.
Given the quantity of wood raw material consumed by pulp mills, any closure of a mill is likelynot only to have an impact on the amount of bioenergy produced in that country, but also tobe associated with a decline in logging. Although this would have an adverse impact on theproportion of bioenergy in the countrys mix of energy supplies, it would have a positiveimpact on sustainability locally. In the global context, if closure of the mill were offset throughleakage (i.e. increased production elsewhere), then the net impact would tend to be zero.Examples are provided in the following two paragraphs.
The decline in roundwood production in the USA may not reflect an increase in thesustainability of US consumption of wood-based products: because although that decline isprimarily attributable to the current economic recession, it is also due partly to theoutsourcing of production to other countries, most notably China.
21 The roundwood
equivalent volume of products which the USA imports from China greatly exceeds that of thewood raw material which it exports to China. The decline in production in the USA during thefour years 20062009 would have generated in the order of 1,500 petajoules of energy ifused as fuel.
22
The success of European (particularly Finnish) enterprises in exporting machinery to newpulp and paper mills during recent years will have contributed to the decline in roundwoodproduction in Finland which is shown in Chart 8.
20These countries include those covered by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). TheUNECEs annual publication Forest Product Statistics is the source of the data presented in Charts 7, 8 and 9.21The amendment of the Lacey Act (which came into effect after recession in the USA became evident) appears tohave had little impact on the quantity and direction of supply of wood-based products to the USA.22Assuming 9 gigajoules per tonne, 1.4 cubic metres per tonne, and 50 million cubic metres per year.
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Chart 8 Roundwood production in selected countries of the EU-27
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The discontinuity between 2004 and 2005 in data for production of firewood in Francepresumably reflects a change in definition of both the product and the range of sources.
Chart 9 Roundwood production in Europe other than the EU-27 and Russia
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Chart 9 indicates that roundwood production during the last decade tended to increase inTurkey and Ukraine, but changed little overall elsewhere. However, source data for severalcountries in Europe, including Belarus and Ukraine, have remained unchanged for a number
of years. In contrast, EU-27 imports of timber sector products (mainly sawn wood) from thosecountries tended to decrease during 2008 and 2009 (and those from Belarus decreasedthroughout the second half of last decade).
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Chart 11 illustrates the surge in exports of mill residues from the USA during 2008 and 2009.Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK now account for almost all the total, most of whichcomprises wood pellets made in a small number of new mills and shipped from Mobile(Alabama) and Tampa (Florida).
The quantity exported to the EU was lower in 2010 than in 2009, perhaps because of theclosure of a large pellet plant in Selmer (Alabama) whichwas having difficulties concerning itsfinances (despite subsidies) and the quality of its pellets.
24
Some, perhaps most, of the large wood-pellet plants which supply the EU from the USA areat least partly owned by investors based in the EU. Structural changes in the USAs paperand timber sectors have helped plantations and forests in the southern states to mature.Exporting pellets to the EU (primarily for use as fuel to generate electricity) will tend to reversethe decline in the regions logging industry.
There is considerable interest in producing wood pellets in north-eastern states of the USA,notably Maine, both for export to the EUand to stimulate sales locally to consumers who arenot connected to natural gas networks.
25
By importing wood pellets, the EU is outsourcing the production of its carbon-based fuel.Under the (still current) Kyoto Protocol this enables the EU to claim that its carbon emissionsare decreasing, as signatories to the protocol must report their emissions from productionrather than consumption or both.
In the longer term, the availability of raw material for the USAs exports of wood pellets willtend to decline as a consequence of efforts to increase the proportion of the national energyconsumption that is supplied from renewable sources 25 per cent by 2025. Proposedlegislation, which would support such a Renewable Energy Standard has not beenaccepted.
26 The quality of the plans which state governments in the USA have devised in
order to meet that target is said to be poor and to have been influenced by politicalconsiderations (the fossil fuel lobby). Relevant industry groups continue to advocate for that25 per cent by 2025 target.
27The USA is said to subsidise the production of pellets by
US$45 per tonne.28
If the EUs Illegal Timber Regulation is fit for purpose and rigorously implemented, thenimporters in the USA might follow the example of their EU counterparts and reduce theirexposure to wood-based products of uncertain origin supplied from China, which would help
revitalise the USAs wood-processing sector.
German and Swedish enterprises (RWE Innogy and BMC) have jointly invested in a large(750,000 tonne/year) wood pellet mill at Waycross, Georgia. Due to become operational in2011, the mill will use its output to co-fire a power station at Amer, in the Netherlands,
29
before being switched to supply a plant in Tilbury, UK.30
A Swedish enterprise (JCE)
31
The availability of sawdust, the most usual wood raw material for pellets has decreased overrecent years as the recession has led to reduced sales of sawn timber. Pellet manufacturershave tended to use wood chips and even logs in order to supplement the sawdust thatremains available at a competitive price.
owns the 560,000 tonne/year mill of Green Core Biomass (inCottonville, Florida). That mill has been constructed in order to supply the EU market.
24http://timberbuysell.com/Community/DisplayNews.asp?id=528225Natural gas is a major competitor of wood pellets for residential heating.26The American Clean Air Act 2009 as proposed by congressmen Waxman and Markey.27http://www.cleanenergy.org/images/files/SACE%20IRP%20comments%20Attachment%203.pdfalsohttp://www.heatne.com/ and http://www.futuremetrics.net/28
http://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdf29http://biomassmagazine.com/articles/3546/georgia-biomass-will-ship-pellets-to-europe30http://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/6267724905/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/biomass/2010/11/rwe-npower_to_convert.html31http://www.jcegroup.se/the_jce_story/green_circle_bio_energy.aspx
http://timberbuysell.com/Community/DisplayNews.asp?id=5282http://timberbuysell.com/Community/DisplayNews.asp?id=5282http://timberbuysell.com/Community/DisplayNews.asp?id=5282http://www.cleanenergy.org/images/files/SACE%20IRP%20comments%20Attachment%203.pdfhttp://www.cleanenergy.org/images/files/SACE%20IRP%20comments%20Attachment%203.pdfhttp://www.cleanenergy.org/images/files/SACE%20IRP%20comments%20Attachment%203.pdfhttp://www.heatne.com/http://www.heatne.com/http://www.heatne.com/http://www.futuremetrics.net/http://www.futuremetrics.net/http://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://biomassmagazine.com/articles/3546/georgia-biomass-will-ship-pellets-to-europehttp://biomassmagazine.com/articles/3546/georgia-biomass-will-ship-pellets-to-europehttp://biomassmagazine.com/articles/3546/georgia-biomass-will-ship-pellets-to-europehttp://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/6267724905/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/biomass/2010/11/rwe-npower_to_convert.htmlhttp://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/6267724905/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/biomass/2010/11/rwe-npower_to_convert.htmlhttp://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/6267724905/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/biomass/2010/11/rwe-npower_to_convert.htmlhttp://www.jcegroup.se/the_jce_story/green_circle_bio_energy.aspxhttp://www.jcegroup.se/the_jce_story/green_circle_bio_energy.aspxhttp://www.jcegroup.se/the_jce_story/green_circle_bio_energy.aspxhttp://www.jcegroup.se/the_jce_story/green_circle_bio_energy.aspxhttp://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/6267724905/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/biomass/2010/11/rwe-npower_to_convert.htmlhttp://www.powergenworldwide.com/index/display/articledisplay/6267724905/articles/powergenworldwide/renewables/biomass/2010/11/rwe-npower_to_convert.htmlhttp://biomassmagazine.com/articles/3546/georgia-biomass-will-ship-pellets-to-europehttp://www.pellet.org/linked/2010-07-09%20wpac%20nb-doe.pdfhttp://www.futuremetrics.net/http://www.heatne.com/http://www.cleanenergy.org/images/files/SACE%20IRP%20comments%20Attachment%203.pdfhttp://timberbuysell.com/Community/DisplayNews.asp?id=52828/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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7 - Canada32
Chart 12 - Exports of wood chips and mill residues from Canada
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Chart 12 indicates that, during 2010, the EU (primarily the Netherlands and the UK) was thedestination for almost two thirds of Canadas exports of wood chips and mill residues in termsof export value. Wood pellets comprise a large majority of those exports to the EU.
33
Chart 13 - Exports of mill residues from Canada
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32Source of data presented in Charts 12 and 13 (export value):
http://www.ic.gc.ca/sc_mrkti/tdst/tdo/tdo.php?lang=30&headFootDir=/sc_mrkti/tdst/headfoot&productType=HS6&cacheTime=962115865#tagand (weight): Eurostat (CN8, monthly)http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/33Based on assessment of import statistics published by Eurostat, Japan Customs, US International TradeCommission Trade DataWeb
http://www.ic.gc.ca/sc_mrkti/tdst/tdo/tdo.php?lang=30&headFootDir=/sc_mrkti/tdst/headfoot&productType=HS6&cacheTime=962115865#taghttp://www.ic.gc.ca/sc_mrkti/tdst/tdo/tdo.php?lang=30&headFootDir=/sc_mrkti/tdst/headfoot&productType=HS6&cacheTime=962115865#taghttp://www.ic.gc.ca/sc_mrkti/tdst/tdo/tdo.php?lang=30&headFootDir=/sc_mrkti/tdst/headfoot&productType=HS6&cacheTime=962115865#taghttp://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://www.ic.gc.ca/sc_mrkti/tdst/tdo/tdo.php?lang=30&headFootDir=/sc_mrkti/tdst/headfoot&productType=HS6&cacheTime=962115865#taghttp://www.ic.gc.ca/sc_mrkti/tdst/tdo/tdo.php?lang=30&headFootDir=/sc_mrkti/tdst/headfoot&productType=HS6&cacheTime=962115865#tag8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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Chart 14 EU-27 imports of primary woody biomass from Russia
8 - Russia39
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Chart 14 indicates that Denmark and Sweden each accounted for roughly one third of theweight of wood pellets which were imported into the EU from Russia towards the end of 2010.Finland imports most of the weight of wood chips and mill residues imported into the EU. Theweight of wood chips is increasing rapidly, not least to help offset the reduction in the volumeof wood logs which had previously been imported for Finlands pulp industry but which are
now subject to increased export tariffs on departure from Russia.A very large pellet plant should be fully operational in Russia by the end of 2011; theVyborgskaya Cellulose mill will have an annual output capacity of one million tonnes and itspellets will be sold mainly on the spot market. Other substantial pellet plants are planned.However, some plants have closed, particularly as a consequenceof changes in exchangerates and an increase in the cost of Russian wood raw material.
40 During 2009, just two
enterprises supplied approximately 40 per cent of the 600,000 tonnes of wood pelletsexported from Russia to the EU.
41
Russia revised its Forestry Code during 2006, but the revised code is unclear anddysfunctional.
Discussion
42Consequently, it will be difficult for those who first place wood-based products
from Russia on the EU market to carry out due diligence when, from 3 March 2013,43
the
EUs Illegal Timber Regulation applies fully.44
39Source: Eurostat (CN8, monthly)http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/40Final three paragraphs, page 2, presentation by Olga Rakitova at Pellet Conference, Wels (03 03 2011).41Final three paragraphs, page 1, presentation by Olga Rakitova at Pellet Conference, Wels (03 03 2011).
42Final four paragraphs, Executive Summary Transition in the Taiga The Russian Forest Code 2006 and itsImplementation Process, Feja Lesniewska, Andrei Laletin, Anatoly Lebedev and Katy Harris (11 2008).43Article 21 Regulation (Eu) No 995/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 October 2010 layingdown the obligations of operators who place timber and timber products on the market, Official Journal of the
European Union (12 11 2010).44There is now considerable Russian interest in a potential Voluntary Partnership Agreement with the EU concerningthe supply of wood-based products final paragraph, page 18 FLEGT 6th Annual Coordination Meeting (01 2011)http://www.euflegt.efi.int/files/attachments/euflegt/flegtweek_finalreport_en.pdf
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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Page 15Page 15
Brazil is considered by some to be the EUs most promising potential source of wood-basedfuel in the southern hemisphere, due particularly to its infrastructure and proximity. However,given that wood plantations in Brazil (and elsewhere) which account for most of Brazilsexports of wood-based products are not necessarily managed sustainably and suitable land
is increasingly scarce, it would not be prudent to assume that wood-based fuel exported fromBrazil would meet EU criteria for sustainability. The wood raw material used in making most ofthe timber and almost all the pulp and paper which is exported from Brazil derives fromplantations. Most of the tropical timber which is logged in Brazil is being used in Brazil.
9 - Brazil
As Chart 16 indicates, the USA accounted for most of the change in the roundwoodequivalent volume of timber exported from Brazil over the last decade, and paper sectorexports (predominantly pulp) accounted for a much greater roundwood equivalent volumethan the timber sector during 2009.
Chart 16 Brazils exports of wood-based products
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Belarus, Norway, Switzerland and Ukraine supply a substantial volume of primary woodybiomass to the EU, mainly as mill residues and logs, mill residues, and (in rapidly increasingquantity) firewood and logs respectively. Croatia and, to a lesser extent, Bosnia-Herzegovinaaccount for a smaller proportion of the total supplied from non-EU Europe (see Chart 17).
10 Other potential sources of supp ly
Chart 18 shows that Australia, Chile, South Africa and Vietnam currently export largequantities of wood chips, mainly to Japan and, increasingly, China. The cost of transportationfrom Australia, Chile and Vietnam might make supplies from these two countriesuncompetitive in the EU market. Although most of the wood chips which are produced inSouth Africa derive from FSC-certified plantations, there is growing evidence that thoseplantations are not being managed sustainably.
48
Brazil, Indonesia, Uruguay and to a lesser extent Congo (Brazzaville)
49
Chart 17 EU-27 imports of wood chips, residues and logs from selected countries in Europe
supply substantial(but smaller) quantities of wood chips.
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48See among others:www.wrm.org.uyandwww.fscwatch.org49The countrys only large plantation used to export eucalyptus logs to pulp mills in Europe and North Africa.
http://www.wrm.org.uy/http://www.wrm.org.uy/http://www.wrm.org.uy/http://www.fscwatch/http://www.fscwatch/http://www.fscwatch/http://www.fscwatch/http://www.wrm.org.uy/8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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Page 19Page 19
growth seems to have slowed during 2010, perhaps as a consequence of campaigns byconsumers and pressure groups such as Greenpeace.
Chart 20 EU Member States imports of palm oil53
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53Source: Eurostat (CN8, monthly)http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/newxtweb/8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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Appendix
This section examines the scale and trends of each EU Member States trade in wood-basedproducts, focusing on primary woody biomass.
It also provides brief remarks concerning that trade and the quantities anticipated in theNational Renewable Energy Action Plans.
The trade statistics presented here are based on those published in Eurostat (CN8,monthly).
55
Conversion factors (approximate)
1.4 cubic metres per tonne for air-dried roundwood and firewood56
1.15 tonnes of roundwood per tonne of wood chips and wood residues12 megawatt hours per tonne oil equivalent
42 gigajoules per tonne oil equivalent
0.2 to 0.4 tonne oil equivalent per tonne of woody biomass
55Suggestions about how to download and process this source data are available fromhttp://www.efi.int/portal/projects/flegt/trade_statistics_data/56The potential for error in this notional amount may be as much as 30%, depending on the moisture content ofdifferent forms of solid woody biomass and the density of different tree species.
http://www.efi.int/portal/projects/flegt/trade_statistics_data/http://www.efi.int/portal/projects/flegt/trade_statistics_data/http://www.efi.int/portal/projects/flegt/trade_statistics_data/8/10/2019 Biomass Imports to the EU Final_0
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Chart A1 -Austrias trade in wood-based products
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Chart A2 - Austrias imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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No change anticipated by NREAP, no change in imports of primary woody biomass during2010. Primary woody biomass is a major component of imports for the timber sector. Woodybiomass already intensively farmed for local and district heating.
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Chart A5 - Bulgarias trade in wood-based products
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Bulgarias NREAP anticipates a modest increase in consumption as energy. There is littletrade in primary woody biomass.
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Chart A6 - Cypruss trade in wood-based products
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Cypruss NREAP anticipates a negligible contribution from solid biomass. Trade in primarywoody biomass is negligible too.
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Chart A7 - Czech Republics trade in wood-based products
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Chart A8 - Czech Republics imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplyingcountry)
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In the Czech Republic, the NREAP anticipates the use of solid biomass for energy to almostdouble between 2010 and 2020. However, imports of primary woody biomass, which grewrapidly during the first two or three quarters of 2010, seem subsequently to have declined.The Czech Republic is a net exporter of timber sector products.
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Chart A9 - Denmarks trade in wood-based products
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Chart A10 - Denmarks imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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Denmarks NREAP anticipates the doubling of electricity generation from solid biomass. Thesubstantial quantity of pellets already being imported will presumably need to greatlyincrease.
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Chart A11 - Estonias trade in wood-based products
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Chart A12 - Estonias imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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)
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0.4
Vo
lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Latvia Russia Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
In Estonia, little change is anticipated by the NREAP. Imports of primary woody biomass werelow during 2010. Estonia is a net exporter of timber, but the quantities traded declined steeplyduring the second half of last decade.
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Chart A13 - Finlands trade in wood-based products
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tima
tedRWEvo
lume
(millioncubicmetres)
Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A14 - Finlands imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
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3.0
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
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6-2010
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ightimporte
dduring
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ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(million
tonnes
)
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Vo
lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Estonia Latvia Russia Sweden Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
In Finland, production and trade in wood-based products declined at the end of the lastdecade. Consequently, energy production from woody biomass (including black liquor) islikely also to have reduced. Imports of primary woody biomass increased strongly during2010, especially from Russia. The NREAP anticipatesa 50 per cent increase in consumptionof solid biomass as energy between 2010 and 2020.
57
57This decline presumably does not reflect the closure of pulp and paper mills which generate energy from millresidues, because much of that energy derives from liquid biomass (black liquor)
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Page A 30Page 30
Chart A15 - Frances trade in wood-based products
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e
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A16 -Frances imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.00
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0.25
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0.35
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0.45
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
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yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
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yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
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ightimporte
ddurin
g
success
ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(million
tonnes
)
0.0
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1.41.6
1.8
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Vo
lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(millioncu
bicme
tres
)
Belgium Germany LuxembourgSpain Switzerland Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Frances NREAP anticipates a large increase in consumption of solid biomass as energy.Imports of primary woody biomass declined between 2007 and 2009 but increased during2010. The quality of the primary woody biomass exported from France is generally greaterthan that which is likely to be used directly as fuel. The roundwood equivalent volume oftimber sector products imported into France during 2009 is similar to the amount by which theNREAP anticipates consumption of solid biomass as fuel should have increased by 2020.
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Chart A17 -Germanys trade in wood-based products
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e
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A18 -Germanys imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.6
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
We
ightimporte
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g
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ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(million
tonnes
)
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lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(millioncu
bicme
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)
Austria Belgium Czech Republic FranceNetherlands Poland Switzerland Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Germanys NREAP anticipates considerable growth in consumption of solid biomass asenergy, particularly electricity generation. Germany could probably meet its NREAP targetsfor heating and cooling by increasing the rate at which mature forest is logged and/or bygreatly reducing its exports of timber sector products. Those exports are of much greaterquality and command a much higher price than the sort of timber which one might normallyburn. The increase in roundwood equivalent volume which the NREAP anticipates is similar tothat which was imported into Germany for the timber sector during 2009.
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Chart A19 -Greeces trade in wood-based products
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e
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A20 -Greeces imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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yt31-1
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yt31-1
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yt30-0
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yt31-1
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yt31-1
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yt30-0
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yt31-1
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ightimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(million
tonnes
)
0.0
0.1
Vo
lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Argentina Bulgaria Gabon Ukraine Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
The NREAP of Greece anticipates little change in the quantity of solid biomass which isconsumed for energy.
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Chart A23 -Irelands trade in wood-based products
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e
(millioncu
bicme
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A24 -Irelands imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.0
0.1
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
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yt30-0
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yt31-1
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yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
We
ightimporte
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ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(million
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)
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lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Finland UK Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Irelands NREAP anticipates that production of energy from solid biomass will more thandouble between 2010 and 2020, while there will be little change in production of solid biomasswithin Ireland itself. The quantity of primary woody biomass imported into Ireland tended todecline during both the second half of the last decade and 2010.
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Chart A25 -Italys trade in wood-based products
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A26 -Italys imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.0
0.1
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0.4
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yt31-12-2009
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yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
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ightimporte
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ive
12-mon
thperio
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(million
tonnes
)
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lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thperio
ds
(millioncu
bicme
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)
Austria Bosnia Herzegovina Croatia France GermanyHungary Slovakia Slovenia Switzerland Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Italys NREAP anticipates that production of energy from solid biomass will more than doublebetween 2010 and 2020. However, since the middle of the last decade, the quantity ofprimary woody biomass imported into Italy has tended to decline. Italys imports of woodpellets (from within the EU) are rapidly increasing.
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Chart A27 -Latvias trade in wood-based products
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A28 -Latvias imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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0.1
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
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ightimporte
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ive
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dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thperio
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(millioncu
bicme
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Belarus Lithuania Russia Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Latvia is a net exporter of timber. Its NREAP anticipates little change in the production ofenergy from solid biomass.
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Chart A29 -Lithuanias trade in wood-based products
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A30 -Lithuanias imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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0.1
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yt31-1
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yt30-0
6-2010
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ightimporte
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ive
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thper
iods
(million
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dduring
success
ive
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thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
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Belarus Latvia Russia Ukraine Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Lithuanias NREAP anticipates that a small but increasing quantity of solid biomass will beused for energy production between 2010 and 2020. Primary woody biomass accounts formuch of the roundwood equivalent volume which is imported or exported from Lithuania.
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Chart A31 -Luxembourgs trade in wood-based products
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A32 -Luxembourgs imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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0.3
yt31-1
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yt31-1
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ightimporte
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iods
(million
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)
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ive
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thper
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(millioncu
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Belgium France Germany Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Primary woody biomass accounts for a substantial proportion of the timber which is importedinto Luxembourg. The NREAP anticipates that there will be very little change in the quantitiesdestined for energy.
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Chart A33 -Maltas trade in wood-based products
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
The NREAP for Malta anticipates that solid biomass will continue to be used as energy insmall quantities. Malta has negligible trade in solid woody biomass.
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Chart A34 -The Netherlands trade in wood-based products
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A35 - The Netherlands imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplyingcountry)
0.0
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0.80.9
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yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
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(millioncu
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Belgium Canada France GermanyLuxembourg Russia USA Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
The NREAP of the Netherlands anticipates a doubling in the amount of electricity generatedfrom solid biofuels between 2010 and 2020. A large quantity of pellets was imported in 2010,but latterly there has been a decline, partly because of difficulties with supplies from the USA.
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Chart A36 -Polands trade in wood-based products58
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Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A37 -Polands imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
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yt31-12
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-2009
yt30-06
-2010
yt31-12
-2010
We
ightimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(million
tonnes
)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
Vo
lumeimporte
ddurin
g
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Belarus Germany Lithuania Slovakia Ukraine Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Poland is a net exporter of timber. Its imports of primary woody biomass, almost all of whichconsisted of logs, increased steeply during 2010.
The NREAP anticipates there being only a small increase in production of woody biomassbetween 2010 and 2020.
58Statistics for the bilateral trade of Poland have only been published by the source since mid-2004.
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Chart A38 -Portugals trade in wood-based products
0
2
4
6
8
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12
2000
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2010
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2010
2000
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2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Es
tima
tedRWEvo
lum
e
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A39 -Portugals imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
yt31-1
2-2009
yt30-0
6-2010
yt31-1
2-2010
We
ightimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(million
tonnes
)
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
Vo
lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Congo DR Congo France Spain Uruguay Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
Portugals NREAP anticipates little change in the quantity of solid biomass consumptionbetween now and 2020.
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Chart A40 -Romanias trade in wood-based products
0
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2000
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2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Es
tima
tedRWEvo
lum
e
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Primary woody biomass Other Timber Sector Other Paper Sector
within the EU-27 outside the EU-27 within the EU-27 outside the EU-27
Imported from countries Exported to countries
Chart A41 -Romanias imports of primary woody biomass (product, by supplying country)
0.0
0.1
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
yt31-12-2009
yt30-06-2010
yt31-12-2010
We
ightimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(million
tonnes
)
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
Vo
lumeimporte
dduring
success
ive
12-mon
thper
iods
(millioncu
bicme
tres)
Hungary Russia Slovakia Ukraine Others
Firewood PelletsChips Residues LogsCharcoal
In Romania, the NREAP antici