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Wis. PSC Approves Utility's Biomass Plan

PSC approves plan to replace coal with dead trees, logging residue at Wis. power plant

A northern Wisconsin utility's latest plan to replace coal with logging waste and dead trees as its primary fuel to generate electricity has been approved by the state Public Service Commission.

Northern States Power Company-Wisconsin, a subsidiary of Minneapolis-based Xcel Energy, said Monday that installing the biomass gasification technology in its third generator at Bay Front Power Plant in Ashland will make it the largest biomass plant in the Midwest — based on producing 60 megawatts of power from that fuel.

The utility now powers two generators with steam made from burning wood products at the plant. It said the cost of converting the third by 2012 is estimated at $58.1 million and the change will eliminate the burning of more than 100,000 tons of coal each year.

"The Bay Front project demonstrates our continuing commitment to the environment and a clean energy future. We're helping our customers and communities practice sustainability while increasing local economic development," Mike Swenson, president and CEO of Northern States Power, said in a statement.

Coal-fired power plant emissions contain carbon dioxide, the leading greenhouse gas linked to global warming.

Wood materials left in forests from logging, such as treetops, damaged trees and underutilized species, will be the primary fuel to produce steam for the third generator, the company said. The wood — described by the company as "lower quality biomass" — will come from several counties in northern Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan.

The Bay Front Power Plant began operating in 1916 as a coal plant, growing to five boilers and six turbines by 1960. Two of the boilers and three of the turbines eventually were retired.

In 2008, the utility installed new equipment to control emissions of nitrogen oxide on the two boilers that have primarily burned wood since 1979.

The plant generates enough electricity to power about 55,000 homes each year, and burning all wood will not affect that capacity, said Brian Elwood, an Excel Energy spokesman in Eau Claire.

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