Abstract

BackgroundAs the demand for wood pellets has increased in EU member states, so has a multi-pronged examination of the environmental effects of establishing a transatlantic trade in wood pellets between the U.S. and Europe. However, the nature of industrial wood pellet supply chains is poorly understood or little known. This work aimed to understand the feedstock sourcing strategies being used by the wood pellet industry in the southeast U.S., commonly applied approaches to documenting sustainability of these feedstocks, and drivers operating behind related developments.MethodsThis study used structured interviews of sustainability managers and procurement staff at pellet mills comprising 75% of the U.S. industrial pellet sector. The industry was classified into types of supply chains, based on the role of loggers, wood dealers, sawmills, and other wood product facilities in the supply chains. Additional classifications examined feedstock types and origins, number and type of suppliers, contractual relationships with suppliers, applied procurement systems, risk assessment and due-diligence methodologies, risk mitigation procedures, and supply chain certifications.ResultsThree main types of supply chains were identified within the U.S. industrial pellet sector, differentiated based on features of feedstock procurement, risk assessment procedures, and risk management. The study observed a slight shift toward using a higher proportion of wood residuals as feedstock in some of the larger pellet mills. Policy requirements, customer orders, and external pressures were driving the sector’s adoption of sustainability programs, with risk assessments and wood procurement procedures aligned to policy requirements.ConclusionsThe strength of a risk-based approach to sustainability documentation depends on the quality of source data on risks within a sourcing area, scale of analysis, and integration of risk assessments into procurement practices. Some risk categories are more difficult to assess and control. Challenges increase with increasing number and diversity of supply chain actors and depend on the nature of agreements between these entities for the conveyance of feedstocks to pellet mills. Fiber procurement is similar to pulpwood-using industries, but extending the risk assessment to residuals is complicated and challenging to the sector. The study identified a number of strategies in use within pellet mill supply chains for dealing with these challenges.

Highlights

  • As the demand for wood pellets has increased in European Union (EU) member states, so has a multi-pronged examination of the environmental effects of establishing a transatlantic trade in wood pellets between the U.S and Europe

  • It is highly likely that wood pellets imported from the southeast U.S in the decade will comprise the largest source of biomass other than those generated within the EU [8, 9, 11], even if European demands are currently predicted to stagnate [12]

  • We first address what drives participation in supply chain certifications and other sustainability programs used by the U.S industrial pellet sector

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Summary

Introduction

As the demand for wood pellets has increased in EU member states, so has a multi-pronged examination of the environmental effects of establishing a transatlantic trade in wood pellets between the U.S and Europe. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has found significant deployment of negative net emission technologies, including bioenergy carbon capture and storage (BECCS), will be necessary to limit global warming to 2 °C by 2100 [2,3,4]. Whether or not such increases are realized, forest bioenergy supply chains are expanding and trade in biomass feedstocks is global. Existing supply chains in the industrial wood pellet sector of the southeast U.S offer a glimpse of what further global deployment may look like if significant growth of wood bioenergy occurs

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