Biomass plant
planned
$70
million to $120
million project in
Klamath Falls ‘on
fast track’
By TY BEAVER
H&N Staff Writer
A Bellevue,
Wash.,-based company
filed documents with
the state of Oregon
Tuesday
to build a
35-megawatt
bioenergy plant
costing between $70
million and $120
million in Klamath
Falls.
The project would
create about 175
jobs
during construction,
30 permanent
positions and 100
jobs in the woods,
the company said.
Klamath Falls
Bioenergy would use
wood waste from
private lands
to generate
electricity in the
plant, according to
a press release. It
would be on property
owned by Collins
Timber Co. along
Highway 66.
“This project is a
winner
for the community,”
said Bob Jones,
president and CEO of
K lamath Falls
Bioenergy’s parent
company.
Commissioner Al
Switzer and Trey
Senn, executive
director of Klamath
County Economic
Development
Association, said
the county has
worked for months to
bring the project to
the area and it
appears to be on the
fast track.
“They want to do it
this year and I
think they’ll be
able to,” Senn said.
The facility would
use a
state-of-the-art
boiler with improved
combustion
technology to
generate enough
energy for 35,000
homes. Fuel for the
next 20 years would
be provided by lands
owned by JWTR
Oregon, a company
owned by Dick Wendt
of Klamath
Falls-based Jeld-Wen.
Jim Kneeland, a
spokesman for the
company, said the
company wants to
build as soon
as possible.
“The process in
Oregon is pretty
straightforward and
we don’t foresee any
significant
problems,” he said.
Jones said the
county was selected
for its ample supply
of wood waste,
Oregon’s renewable
energy requirements
and previous
experience with
power facilities
such as the Klamath
Falls Cogeneration
Plant.
More than 98 percent
of the ash created
from burning the
wood fuel will be
captured before it
is expelled into the
atmosphere, and the
project will reduce
pollution from slash
burns in the forest,
he said.
“We believe that
when you consider
the virtual
elimination of slash
burns plus the jobs
we
create, we will be a
very positive
economic impact for
the community,” he
said.
Switzer said the
project, a year and
a half in the
making, will be a
boon for the county
in various ways,
from reducing the
impacts from poor
air quality to
providing badly
needed jobs.
“We’re talking good
paying jobs,” he
said. “We’re talking
truck drivers, we’re
talking people
working equipment.”
While slash from
public lands
sometimes makes it
to bioenergy
facilities, Switzer
said federal
agencies have
avoided long-term
contracts to provide
wood waste for fuel.
The goal is to
change that, he
said.
“Our hope would be
that as this
develops, the public
lands would have a
place to take their
slash,” he said.
Senn
added that the
facility will
further contribute
to the county’s
image and reputation
for sustainability
and its push to
become the renewable
energy center of the
country.
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