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Forest Biomass Policies and Regulations in the United States of America

Deborah S. Page‐Dumroese, Carlos Rodríguez Franco, James G. Archuleta, Marcus E. Taylor, Kraig Kidwell, Jeffrey C. High, Kathleen Adam

2022Forests23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Using woody biomass from public lands could attract private investments, increase carbon dioxide emission reductions from sustainably harvested low-grade wood to mitigate climate change, provide benefits for the environment, and support rural community economies. Available for use are about 210 million oven dry tons (in the western U.S. alone) of small-diameter wood and harvest residues that could be removed through hazard-fuel treatments and used for bioenergy and bioproducts; representing an economic value of approximately USD 5.97 billion (109). Reaching that utilization goal requires an assessment of current U.S. policies, regulations and directives influencing the use of forest biomass and identification of barriers, challenges, and potential opportunities associated with the use of woody biomass from public lands. One objective of this review is to support the implementation of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service (USDA-FS) new effort called “Confronting the Wildfire Crisis: A Strategy for Protecting Communities and Improving Resilience in America’s Forests”, but greater coordination of public policies (regulatory legislation, government subsidies, support programs) at different government levels could increase adoption of forest biomass for bioenergy and bioproducts while also promoting different supply chains for long-term biomass supplies and industry investments. Harmonizing the definition of key biomass terms used by different programs that support using forest biomass for bioenergy and other bioproducts, including the Renewable Fuel Standard, may increase forest biomass use from public lands.

Topics & Concepts

BioproductsBusinessBiomass (ecology)BioenergySustainabilityNatural resource economicsSubsidyEcosystem servicesAgricultural economicsAgroforestryEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental resource managementBiofuelEcosystemEconomicsWaste managementEngineeringEcologyMarket economyBiologyForest Management and PolicyBioenergy crop production and managementFire effects on ecosystems
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