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Introduction
The term "biomass," when used for purposes of determining diversion credit, is
very limited. "Biomass conversion" uses organic materials--such as wood, lawn and garden clippings, agricultural waste, leaves, tree
pruning as well as nonrecyclable paper--to produce heat or electricity. Biomass
conversion cannot include any other materials;
combustion of trash is called "transformation."
Jurisdictions may claim diversion credit for materials sent to qualifying
biomass facilities as explained below. This diversion credit, which began
in the 2000 report year, may not exceed 10 percentage points (based on estimated
report-year generation tons which exclude report-year tons of material delivered
to biomass facilities).
- "Biomass Conversion" means the controlled combustion, when separated from other
solid waste and used for producing electricity or heat, of (1) agricultural crop
residues; (2) bark, lawn, yard, and garden clippings; (3) leaves,
silviculture residue, tree and brush pruning; (4) wood, wood chips, and wood
waste; or (5) nonrecyclable pulp or nonrecyclable paper.
- "Class I Hazardous Waste Facility" means a facility permitted by
the Department of Toxic
Substances Control to
accept and dispose hazardous waste as defined in California
Health and Safety Code Section 25141.
Requirements for Jurisdictions Claiming Biomass
Diversion Credits
Jurisdictions claiming the biomass diversion credit must:
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Exclusively
burns biomass materials.
- Complies with all applicable air quality laws, rules, and regulations.
- Tests
its residue (ash) regularly, and if hazardous, sends that residue to a Class I hazardous waste facility.
Burning material other than biomass, such as hazardous
waste, tires, or municipal solid waste, disqualifies a facility for
biomass diversion credit. However, burning other materials such as
petroleum coke or natural gas to maintain a particular temperature level is permissible.
California Integrated Waste Management Board Requirements
The Board is required to determine at a public hearing that the jurisdiction
is and will continue to be effectively implementing all feasible source
reduction, recycling, and composting measures [PRC 41783.1(a)(4)]. In addition,
local assistance staff will assist any jurisdiction
claiming biomass diversion credit to
calculate an annual diversion rate that includes biomass diversion credit. "The
Board's online Diversion Rate Calculator
that displays diversion information for any jurisdiction is not designed to add
a biomass diversion credit to the diversion rate estimate. However, the
Electronic Annual Report (EAR) online
Diversion Rate Calculator is designed to add the credit. Calculating
an Annual Diversion Rate That
Includes Biomass
- Biomass diversion credit is limited to a maximum of 10 diversion percentage points. The remaining diversion
percentage points must come from source reduction, recycling,
and/or composting.
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Compare jurisdiction biomass tonnage sent to a
qualifying biomass facility with the jurisdiction’s estimated report-year
waste generation. For every one percent of
estimated report-year waste generation tonnage, an equal tonnage of biomass earns one
percentage point of biomass diversion credit up to the maximum allowed. For example:
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If
the estimated report-year generation (w/o biomass) is
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And
the tonnage sent to the biomass facility is:
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And
the diversion rate without biomass is:
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Then
the biomass credit allowed is:
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And
the biomass-adjusted diversion rate is:
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100
tons
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5
tons (5%)
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40%
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5%
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45%
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100
tons
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10
tons (10%)
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40%
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10% (max.)
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50%
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100
tons
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20
tons (20%)
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40%
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10% (max.)
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50%
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1,000
tons
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20
tons (2%)
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40%
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2%
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42%
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Legislation:
Chapter 1227, Statutes of 1994, (Sher, AB 688)
Chapter 439, Statutes of 1999, (Thomas, AB 514)
Statute: Public Resources Code (PRC) Sections
PRC 40106,
Definition of Biomass Conversion
PRC 41783.1,
Conditions and Requirements for Claiming Credit
Related documents
Biomass Guidelines
Biomass
Facility Diversion Claim Sheet (MS Word 2000, 71 kb)
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