How important is biomass for Canada?

Biomass (often called bioenergy) plays a moderate but important role in Canada’s energy system, especially for heating and industrial use.

Overall importance

  • Biomass supplied about 6% of Canada’s total end-use energy in 2023 (≈624 petajoules).
  • It is the second-largest renewable energy source after hydropower.
  • It contributes to electricity, heat, and transportation fuels.

Main types of biomass used

Canada uses three main categories:

1. Solid biomass (dominant)

  • Makes up about 70–80% of bioenergy use
  • Examples:
    • Firewood
    • Wood pellets
    • Forestry residues (bark, sawdust)
    • Pulping liquor (from paper mills)

Mostly used for:

  • Residential heating
  • Industrial heat and power

2. Liquid biofuels

  • Includes:
    • Ethanol (from corn/wheat)
    • Biodiesel / renewable diesel
  • Mainly used in the transportation sector as fuel additives or substitutes.

3. Gaseous biofuels

  • Includes:
    • Biogas
    • Renewable natural gas (RNG)
  • Used for heating, electricity, and injection into gas pipelines.

Where biomass is used

Industrial sector (largest user)

  • Especially pulp and paper industry
  • Uses wood waste to generate heat and electricity (cogeneration)
  • Accounts for the majority of biomass consumption

Residential heating

  • Wood is still widely used:
    • About 9% of residential space heating (2020)
  • Important in rural and remote communities

Electricity generation

  • Biomass produces about:
    • ~1–1.5% of Canada’s electricity
  • Around 9,000 GWh annually

Geographic distribution

Biomass use is highest in provinces with strong forestry industries:

  • British Columbia
  • Ontario
  • Quebec
  • Alberta
  • New Brunswick

Biomass resources in Canada

Canada has abundant sources:

  • Forest residues (major source)
  • Agricultural waste
  • Municipal solid waste
  • Animal residues

It is also a major exporter of wood pellets, especially to Europe and Asia.


Key advantages

  • Renewable when sustainably managed
  • Helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions
  • Uses waste materials (forestry, agriculture)
  • Supports rural economies

Challenges

  • Sustainability concerns (e.g., forest harvesting)
  • Air pollution from combustion
  • Lower efficiency compared to some renewables
  • Competes with land use (food vs fuel)

Conclusion

Biomass in Canada is:

  • A significant renewable energy source, but smaller than hydro
  • Used mainly for heat and industrial energy, not electricity
  • Based largely on forestry resources
  • Growing in importance for low-carbon fuels and decarbonization