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Energy plant to cost up to $12 million
When complete, Tribes’
green enterprise park could provide 200 jobs
By TY BEAVER
H&N Staff Writer
September 11, 2008
The Klamath Tribes9
proposed biomass energy generation facility in
northern Klamath County
would cost $8 million to $12 million to build.
Tribal leaders are meeting with potential
partners on the project, which will be on the former
Crater Lake Mill site, 25
miles north of Chiloquin.
Preliminary plans call for an 8-megawatt
plant that would use a variety of biomass sources,
such as woody material and solid waste from urban
areas. At full capacity, the plant could provide
energy for about 4,000 homes.
“The technology is really
extraordinary,” said Jeff Mitchell, Klamath tribal
council member.
The Tribes purchased the
site in late August. They’ve designated the 108-acre
parcel as the future home of the Giiwas Green
Enterprise Park.
The proposed biomass
facility would be the development’s main component,
but it also would have other forest products-related
industry, such as wood bundling services,
manufacture of small diameter poles and posts and
juniper products. When complete, the park would
provide an estimated 200 family-wage jobs, tribal
officials said.
The facility would have
biomass conversion units capable of producing up to
two megawatts each. Mitchell said the technology was
developed in England and would allow the facility to
produce energy from a variety of sources
instead of just one. It costs roughly $1 million to
$1.5 million per megawatt to build an energy plant,
he said.
Gasification technology
would be the key aspect of the plant. Woody material
or other feedstock would be decomposed and 90
percent of it would become gas to drive electrical
generators. The remaining material would be a solid
carbon byproduct.
Partners
Tribal leaders are working
with a national American Indian organization called
IDRS Inc. as part of a five-tribe project designed
around forests and tribal
economies. The Tribes also are working with Oregon
Institute of Technology and Klamath Community
College to provide technical expertise and training
for future employees.
Tom Chester, director of
the Oregon Renewable Energy Center at OIT, is eager
to work with the Tribes and has discussed the
project with the Tribes’ consultant. He said there
are issues still to be worked out, such as how much
energy would be generated and what happens to any
leftover material.
Toby Freeman, regional
community manager with PacifiCorp, said his company
would be open to working with the Tribes on the
project, though the facility would be in the area
serviced by Bend-based Mid-State Electric.
PacifiCorp spoke with the
Tribes two years ago about the project and provided
some financial analysis, Freeman said. The company
is supportive of all renewable20energy development.
“I think it’s good for all
of us,” he said.
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