Cutting down forests to feed Drax incurs a huge carbon cost | Letters

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"Concerns Grow Over Drax Power Station's Impact on Forests and Climate Strategy"

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The ongoing practice of using forests in countries like Estonia, Latvia, the United States, and Canada to supply wood pellets for the Drax power station has raised significant environmental concerns. Critics argue that this approach, which relies on burning biomass for energy, is fundamentally flawed as it incurs a substantial carbon cost and threatens biodiversity. Additionally, the regeneration of forests, which play a crucial role in absorbing carbon dioxide, can take decades. The Labour Party has indicated that subsidies for this practice should not extend beyond 2031, signaling a potential shift towards more sustainable energy solutions. Advocates for change emphasize the need to invest in renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, and tidal energy, which would support energy security without the adverse effects associated with biomass burning.

Moreover, there is a growing call for alternative strategies, such as carbon capture and storage (CCS), which could prove more effective in addressing climate change than biomass. Some argue that while burning wood is a better option than coal, it should only serve as a temporary measure until more sustainable energy sources are developed. The alarming trend of large-scale biomass energy, particularly from ancient forests, raises questions about the integrity of the UK's climate strategy. Recent discussions at climate negotiation meetings highlighted the risk of prioritizing industrial-scale forest biomass energy under the guise of a bioeconomy, which could exacerbate environmental degradation. As climate change continues to escalate, the destruction of woodlands due to increasing wildfires and other natural disasters underscores the urgent need for a comprehensive and responsible approach to energy production and environmental conservation.

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Dale Vince is right that paying the Drax power station billions of pounds to burn forests is not a coherent climate strategy (Ancient trees are shipped to the UK, then burned – using billions in ‘green’ subsidies. Stop this madness now, 21 June) . Labour has already said these subsidies should not continue beyond 2031 – a welcome and necessary step.

Cutting down forests in Estonia, Latvia, the US andCanadais destructive to biodiversity. What’s more, it makes no climate sense – for forests to recover their role as lungs that absorb carbon dioxide takes decades. Biomass, of the type Drax uses, incurs a huge carbon cost.

Relying on millions of tonnes of imported wood to keep the lights on is dangerous. A strategy for energy security means investing in real, homegrown renewables – wind, solar, tidal and restoring nature to capture carbon.Alex SobelLabour and Co-operative MP for Leeds Central and Headingley

We have to remember that using Drax to burn freshly grown wood is better than burning coal and not planting any trees at all (as we merrily did last century).Draxis a stepping stone to a low carbon future and should be switched off once the alternatives are in place.

I am saddened to hear that Canada is using virgin forest to supply Drax. This should be stopped by its government. There are other stepping stones that should be given consideration: “blue options” as opposed to “grey” or “green” options. Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is likely to be a better blue option than biomass, because the CO2is removed immediately and not recycled into the atmosphere. However biomass is cheaper.

All options need to be kept on the table, partly to avoid having all our eggs in one basket and partly to make sure we come as close as possible to a speedy, low-cost transition that we can afford.Tom BlandfordFordingbridge, Hampshire

Creative accounting has always been the refuge of scoundrels. That the UK government wants to continue to book nonexistentemissions reductionsthrough large-scale wood burning that annihilates ancient forests and use ever more taxpayer money to subsidise the scam is not only shameful, but also alarming to anyone hoping for real action on climate.

At the Bonn climate negotiation meetings I recently attended, it transpired that Brazil seems intent on a big push for the bioeconomy at theupcoming COP op30in the Amazon. It’s obvious that, cloaked in platitudes about small-scale social bioeconomy measures with merit, industrial scale forest biomass energy will charge through this gateway.

Burning up the biosphere as climate action is the Orwellian prospect we all face.Peg PuttFormer member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly

At the moment, the issue of burning trees in power stations like Drax must surely be vastly overshadowed by the seasonal “accidental” loss of established woodland by the annual return of highly energetic and polluting fires in Canada, Russia and Europe.

Having their likely origin in changing weather (and therefore also climate) patterns, resulting in prolonged droughts and rising temperatures, accompanied by natural and anthropogenic ignition sources, these events are likely to be irreversible, without a dramatic universal reduction in CO2emissions, as well as in the release of CH4(methane, with its dramatically higher environmental damage potential) from melting permafrosts in Arctic, sub-Arctic and alpine environments, and from animal husbandry.William CarmichaelSafenwil, Switzerland

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Source: The Guardian