The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source

The southern pine beetle (SPB) poses a significant threat to pine forests of the southeastern US. Pre-commercial thinning (PCT) is a commonly used silvicultural practice to mitigate and prevent SPB spread in young southern pine stands. Typically, PCT represents an added management cost to landowners...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hanzelka, Nathan Carl
Other Authors: Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52577
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-52577
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-525772020-09-29T05:42:24Z The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source Hanzelka, Nathan Carl Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation Sullivan, Bradley J. Bolding, M. Chad Barrett, Scott M. pre-commercially thinned woody biomass utilization feasibility The southern pine beetle (SPB) poses a significant threat to pine forests of the southeastern US. Pre-commercial thinning (PCT) is a commonly used silvicultural practice to mitigate and prevent SPB spread in young southern pine stands. Typically, PCT represents an added management cost to landowners and thinned material is not utilized for forest products. Increased demand for woody biomass energy may provide landowners and harvesting contractors an opportunity to utilize PCT residues as a woody biomass energy feedstock, which may wholly or partially offset PCT costs. However, little information is available regarding harvestable biomass quantities in PCT stands and few studies have assessed harvesting productivity and costs in very young pine stands. To develop estimates of biomass abundance in PCT candidate stands, loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) stands aging 5 to 12-years old, and enrolled in the Virginia Department of Forestry Pine Bark Beetle Prevention Program (VDOF PBBPP), were inventoried across the Piedmont and Coastal Plain regions of Virginia. To attain productivity and cost estimates of utilizing small-diameter stems for woody biomass energy, a biomass harvesting case study was then conducted on a 15-year old loblolly pine stand. Results of the inventory and case study indicate that stands at the upper age limit for the PCT program may contain harvestable quantities of biomass (39.63 green tons/acre), although high harvesting costs ($23.46/green ton) relative to regional delivered biomass prices may limit the economic feasibility of utilizing PCT biomass for energy. Master of Science 2015-05-23T08:08:03Z 2015-05-23T08:08:03Z 2015-05-22 Thesis vt_gsexam:5079 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52577 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic pre-commercially thinned
woody biomass
utilization
feasibility
spellingShingle pre-commercially thinned
woody biomass
utilization
feasibility
Hanzelka, Nathan Carl
The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source
description The southern pine beetle (SPB) poses a significant threat to pine forests of the southeastern US. Pre-commercial thinning (PCT) is a commonly used silvicultural practice to mitigate and prevent SPB spread in young southern pine stands. Typically, PCT represents an added management cost to landowners and thinned material is not utilized for forest products. Increased demand for woody biomass energy may provide landowners and harvesting contractors an opportunity to utilize PCT residues as a woody biomass energy feedstock, which may wholly or partially offset PCT costs. However, little information is available regarding harvestable biomass quantities in PCT stands and few studies have assessed harvesting productivity and costs in very young pine stands. To develop estimates of biomass abundance in PCT candidate stands, loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) stands aging 5 to 12-years old, and enrolled in the Virginia Department of Forestry Pine Bark Beetle Prevention Program (VDOF PBBPP), were inventoried across the Piedmont and Coastal Plain regions of Virginia. To attain productivity and cost estimates of utilizing small-diameter stems for woody biomass energy, a biomass harvesting case study was then conducted on a 15-year old loblolly pine stand. Results of the inventory and case study indicate that stands at the upper age limit for the PCT program may contain harvestable quantities of biomass (39.63 green tons/acre), although high harvesting costs ($23.46/green ton) relative to regional delivered biomass prices may limit the economic feasibility of utilizing PCT biomass for energy. === Master of Science
author2 Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
author_facet Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
Hanzelka, Nathan Carl
author Hanzelka, Nathan Carl
author_sort Hanzelka, Nathan Carl
title The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source
title_short The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source
title_full The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source
title_fullStr The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source
title_full_unstemmed The Prevalence and Operational Feasibility of Utilizing Pre-commercially Thinned Pine as a Woody Biomass Energy Source
title_sort prevalence and operational feasibility of utilizing pre-commercially thinned pine as a woody biomass energy source
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/52577
work_keys_str_mv AT hanzelkanathancarl theprevalenceandoperationalfeasibilityofutilizingprecommerciallythinnedpineasawoodybiomassenergysource
AT hanzelkanathancarl prevalenceandoperationalfeasibilityofutilizingprecommerciallythinnedpineasawoodybiomassenergysource
_version_ 1719345332967440384