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Ontario government promotes forest byproducts to generate jobs and clean energy

Tall green piece of machinery sits at a diagonal with wood shavings coming out the top and landing in a pile below.
Secondary wood products are created at a northern Ontario sawmill. Photo courtesy of the Ontario Forest Industries Association

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The Ontario government has launched a five-year plan to bolster the province’s forestry industry by expanding biomass projects that turn waste wood into energy or useful products.

The forest biomass action plan is designed to open new markets, increase demand for bioenergy and support Indigenous involvement in the biomass industry.

It emphasizes the use of leftover materials from logging, such as bark, wood shavings and sawdust produced by sawmills. But the plan also includes what the Ontario government calls “biofibre”: parts like treetops and branches that aren’t normally turned into forest products.

“Sometimes there are resources that don’t have a commercial value to industry that, if left on the site, create a challenge for getting really good [forest] renewal,” said Jason Koivisto, manager of forestry innovation and market development at the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry.

In northern Ontario, there are five biomass generating stations powered by material from sawmills and panel mills. In parallel with the action plan, the province is extending the energy contracts for these stations.

The Ontario government has launched a five-year plan to bolster the province’s forestry industry by expanding biomass projects that turn waste wood into energy or useful products. 

“The hope is that we diversify and grow the industry,” said Koivisto. “Some of it will be new companies coming in, some will be other industries [that] need to address their own carbon footprint and are looking for solutions to help them bridge to that net-zero future.”

The Ontario government also plans to advocate for the benefits of biomass under the federal government’s clean fuel standard.

Although the Ontario government bills the expansion as sustainable, biomass projects — especially those that burn wood for energy — are contentious. Environmental advocates warn they are based on faulty assumptions about greenhouse gas emissions and calculations that leave out significant parts of the equation.

A 2021 report by Nature Canada and the Natural Resources Defense Council said biomass energy is not a clean alternative to fossil fuels. It accused the federal government of “giving the logging industry a free pass” by ignoring the full scale of logging emissions, such as logging roads and infrastructure.

“The atmosphere does not distinguish between carbon released from logging and the carbon emitted by burning fossil fuels,” the report said. But the government has a different set of rules for the logging industry that downplay its emissions by ignoring natural emissions like wildfires but taking credit for carbon stored in growing trees.

Michael Polanyi, policy and campaign manager at Nature Canada and co-author of the report, said the imbalance creates a “perverse incentive” for burning trees. When the same standards are applied to the forestry sector as elsewhere, he said, the balance sheet looks quite different.

“When the massive carbon release associated with logging is accurately accounted for, logging is a large emitter of carbon,” said Polanyi. He said burning wood is not carbon-neutral and should be subject to a carbon price, just like burning fossil fuels is.

Ian Dunn from the Ontario Forest Industries Association said having markets for forest biomass prevents waste products from going to the landfill.

“In the absence of a market for that material, [mills] would have to create and operate landfills on-site or use municipal landfills,” Dunn said. “It's really important for biomass facilities to be out there on the landscape to act as a market for that material.”

However, in British Columbia, forestry companies have been found converting whole trees — not just leftover byproducts — into wood pellets for biomass, raising concerns about the environmental impacts of increased demand for timber.

Dunn said that type of activity is rare in Ontario. He also said biomass plays an important role in transitioning off fossil fuels.

“A lot of new technologies, such as hydrogen, they're years away,” said Dunn. “We have technology right now to consume large amounts of biomass, an opportunity to increase the consumption at these facilities. I think it's important for people to realize that to get to these new products is going to take time and you just can't flip a switch.”

He also said Ontario’s forests can sustainably support almost double the current harvest.

“There's a huge amount of wood supply out there, and that's really what this forest sector strategy and biomass action plan are there to support — full utilization of what is sustainably available in the province,” he said.

He said managing Ontario's boreal forest, which has been driven by natural disturbances like wildfire for thousands of years, is part of keeping the forest healthy. The goal of Ontario’s forestry strategy is to mimic these disturbances through logging, which he said reduces emissions overall.

“We need to get ahead of those fires,” he said. “We need to put those trees into long-term wood products or put them in a furnace and generate clean, green energy.”

But the extent of logging in Ontario is often lowballed, a study by the Ontario Wildlands League found. Approximately 21,700 hectares of land are deforested each year in Ontario as a result of logging infrastructure — losses that are largely unaccounted for in official reporting. An analysis by Canada National Observer columnist Barry Saxifrage says so much Canadian forest is lost to logging and fire every year that forestry is no longer a truly sustainable industry.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said sustainable forest management and biomass can lower greenhouse gas emissions and contribute to adaptation, but in a special report, the UN body also flagged risks and limitations.

Nature Canada’s Polanyi said effective climate action can’t happen if there's faulty accounting.

“Governments can’t put in place effective policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and tackle the climate crisis unless they're accurately measuring and reporting emissions from industry practices in sectors across the economy,” Polanyi said.

“The IPCC is very clear that if countries are not going to report [forestry] emissions because they're deeming those to be natural, rather than anthropogenic, they have to do that in a balanced way.”

Updates and corrections | Corrections policy

This story has been updated to correct the wording of a quote by Michael Polyani.

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