Having a biomass plant in Dobbins will not only reduce the cost of implementation for regional projects but will also bolster the local community with new jobs and business opportunities.
“Trucking wood chips and other materials from forest health treatment sites is costly, increases emissions and is rarely covered by state and federal grants that help fund these projects,” explained Yuba Water watershed manager JoAnna Lessard.
“Having a local biomass plant to process these materials removes a huge barrier to scaling up forest health and wildfire risk reduction efforts in the region.”
Camptonville Community Partnership already owns the land where the biomass plant will be built and is close to finalising an interconnection and power purchase agreement with Pacific Gas & Electric.
Those agreements include plans to upgrade the electrical infrastructure to allow the biomass plant to connect to the grid once it's built.
Camptonville Community Partnership is partnering with Engeman Energy on construction and operations, with a goal of bringing the plant online by 2026.
Camptonville Community Partnership and Yuba Water are both part of the nine-member North Yuba Forest Partnership, which identified biomass processing and the lack of a local biomass facility as a key barrier to completing needed forest health treatments in the Yuba River watershed.
The partnership is working on an unprecedented scale to restore 275,000 acres of Sierra Nevada forests to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire.
As the owner and operator of New Bullards Bar Dam and Reservoir and other critical facilities in the Yuba River watershed, Yuba Water leadership is keenly aware of the wildfire risks and has been a longtime supporter of the project, previously providing funding to help with planning and land acquisition.
This latest round of funding will cover construction of the biomass plant, with a 20-year loan at a 3% interest rate.
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