Biomass can play much bigger role in Minnesota

Biomass plays a moderate but important role in Minnesota’s energy system, especially for heating and certain industrial uses. Here’s a clear overview:


How much biomass Minnesota uses

  • Biomass accounts for a small share of total energy but a significant share of renewables.
  • Around 3% of total energy consumption comes from biomass.
  • Within renewable energy, biomass provides a large portion (about 60%+).

For electricity specifically:

  • Biomass contributes a few percent of generation (≈2–4%), depending on the year.

Main types of biomass used

Minnesota relies heavily on forest-based biomass, plus some waste sources:

1. Wood and wood waste (dominant)

  • Logging residues, sawmill waste, and urban wood waste
  • About 1.3 million tons of woody biomass used annually (recent estimate).

2. Agricultural biomass

  • Crop residues (like corn stover)
  • Energy crops (e.g., switchgrass, hybrid poplar)

3. Waste-based biomass

  • Municipal solid waste (trash-to-energy)
  • Landfill gas and sludge

What biomass is used for

Biomass in Minnesota is used mostly for heat, not electricity:

  • Residential heating: ~55%
  • Industrial process heat: ~43%
  • Commercial heating: small share

It’s especially important in:

  • Rural homes (wood stoves, pellet heating)
  • Forest-product industries (paper mills, sawmills)

Biomass for electricity & energy systems

  • Minnesota has biomass power plants and cogeneration facilities (heat + electricity).
  • Example: facilities burning wood waste to supply district heating and power.
  • Some plants use combined heat and power (CHP) for efficiency.

Availability and potential

  • The state has large forest resources, with hundreds of millions of tons of biomass available.
  • Currently, only about 35% of potential woody biomass is utilized → significant room for growth.

There’s also growing interest in:

  • Using insect-damaged trees (e.g., ash trees)
  • Producing biofuels and sustainable aviation fuel

Environmental impact

Advantages:

  • Lower sulfur emissions than fossil fuels
  • Can be considered carbon-neutral over the full lifecycle (if forests regrow)

Challenges:

  • Still emits CO₂ and air pollutants when burned
  • Sustainability depends on forest management and supply chains

Conclusion:

Biomass in Minnesota is:

  • A major renewable resource, but
  • A minor part of total energy use, and
  • Primarily used for heating and industrial energy, not electricity