The Klamath Tribes and
Graveson Energy Management, or GEM
Americas Inc., hope to convert
municipal, industrial
and commercial solid waste into a clean
synthetic gas that can heat boilers,
produce electricity or be converted into
methanol. Jeff Mitchell, a tribal
council member and
chairman of its biomass committee, and
Will Hatcher, the Tribes natural
resources director, said the idea of
developing a biomass plant stems, in
part, from the loss of clean energy if
Klamath River dams are removed. Dam
removal is a key factor in implementing
the proposed Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement, which would allocate water
among tribal and fisheries interests and
irrigators and conservationists.
The Tribes recently bought the
former Crater Lake Mill site 25 miles
north of Chiloquin. Along with using
typical biomass materials like dead and
salvageable wood, the Tribes are
partnering with GEM to study a new
process that uses municipal and other
solid wastes.
“There is nothing comparable
in the states,” said Brett KenCairn, a
GEM spokesman. “Europe is way ahead of
us.”
The company uses thermal
cracking technology to convert waste
into clean synthetic gas without
combustion.
Air quality concerns
Members of Klamath County’s
solid waste advisory committee have
voiced concerns about the process and
the possible release of toxins into the
atmosphere.
Mike House, the committee’s
director, said the Tribes would have to
clear a series of costly permit and
hearing processes with several agencies
over a multiyear period. He said strict
environmental regulations mean no energy
plant would be allowed to negatively
impact air quality.
“It takes basically an act of
Congress to get these set up,” House
said. “Until we see something coming
across the desk, it’s not worth worrying
about.”
No smokestacks
Ken Cairn downplayed
environmental concerns.
“We are not talking about
waste incineration,” he said, adding
that the closed gasification system
process results in no emissions. “We all
know about the many complications and
dangers of that. There are no
smokestacks.”
But he admitted the new
technology is little understood.
“There should be a healthy
public dialogue,” he said. “We’re really
committed to working with the county. A
lot of things are coming forth that
people have not heard about.”
Mitchell said preliminary
talks are being held with Klamath and
Deschutes counties about using municipal
solid wastes, which are less expensive
and more efficient than woody debris. He
said using municipal solid waste at the
energy plant normally destined for
county landfills and transported by
train to Washington could be more cost
effective.
Mitchell and Hatcher said some
of the energy generated would be used at
the Tribes’ newly purchased mill site,
which has been renamed Giiwas Green
Enterprise Park. It could provide power
for a variety of green forest products
businesses, such as manufacturing wood
chips, juniper products, bundled
firewood, small diameter poles and
posts, and for such agricultural uses as
greenhouses.
Excess energy could be sold
over the grid and transmitted on through
existing lines, Mitchell said. Plans
call for bringing
the system online incrementally,
starting with two megawatts of
electricity and eventually generating up
to eight megawatts.
Mitchell said the scope of the
energy producing facility means the
project will likely take four to five
years to develop.
“A project this size doesn’t
happen overnight,” he said.
On the Web
For more
information on Graveson Energy
Management, or GEM Americas Inc., and
the thermal cracking technology proposed
for a Klamath Tribes biomass plant visit
the company Web site at
www.gemamericainc.
com. For information about Graveson
operations in the United Kingdom, visit
the Web site at gem-ltd.co.uk.
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