Wood Pellet Plant in Mendocino County Threatens Public Health
[ Photo: Mendocino Forest Products Calpella Distribution Center courtesy of Mendocino Redwood Company. ]
On April 3, community activists from Mendocino County were interviewed on KPFA’s Terra Verde radio program. Host Gary Hughes spoke with Polly Girvin and Maria Gilardin about the threats posed by a wood pellet processing facility in Calpella, which is located on the Russian River six miles north of Ukiah.
Polly and Maria are members of Social, Environmental and Indigenous Justice (SEIJ), an affinity group waging a campaign to protect rural and indigenous communities from pollution emitted by Mendocino Forest Products (MFP) and their wood pellet fuel plant. According to the MFP website, “CalPellets™ fuel pellet products are produced out of a fir-redwood blend.”
While speaking on the Terra Verde program, Polly Girvin described some of the many concerns community members have with the Calpella Distribution Center operated by Mendocino Forest Products:
“I live on the Coyote Valley Reservation and take a road down to the freeway. And at first there was a little pipe belching up some smoke sometimes. A little bit of wood chips underneath this tented area, and it went on like that for a while.
“Then all the sudden there was this exponential boom. There were mountains of plastic bags filled with wood pellets. It was going night and day this smokestack, belching out huge clouds. One time I noticed it was very rancid and it stank, and it was going down the valley towards Ukiah.
“Going south from the plant are two schools, a residential neighborhood of low to moderate income mostly Hispanic people, one block away a tribal health clinic that services ten tribes, and a little bit up the road is the Coyote Valley Reservation.”
Mendocino Forest Products, Mendocino Redwood Company, and Humboldt Redwood Company are owned by Sansome Partners, a San Francisco-based investment firm with offices in Seattle and Boston. The Fisher Family of San Francisco is the primary investor in Sansome Partners.
For more information on the global impacts of the wood pellet industry, check out the documents at the end of this article:
- Clear Cut Fact Sheet
- Clear Cut: Wood Pellet Production, the Destruction of Forests, and the Case for Environmental Justice
- Dirty Deception: How the Wood Biomass Industry Skirts the Clean Air Act
For more information from SEIJ on the MFP Calpella facility, see their press release posted below:
Date: December 6, 2019
For immediate and continuous release
From: Social Environmental and Indigenous Justice (SEIJ)
Re: Urgent need for public to be informed by the County and the Air Quality Management District as to the ongoing and uncorrected hazardous pollution being emitted from the Mendocino Forest Product’s Wood Pellet Production Plant in Calpella, CA located close to two elementary schools and Indian Health clinic and the Coyote Valley reservation.
Contact person: Polly Girvin 707-485-2604
From the press release accompanying the opening of the Mendocino Forest Product’s (MFP) wood pellet production plant in Calpella the company owners stated:
“The plant will produce between 1.5 million and 1.75 million 40 pound bags of pellets each year (30,000 to 35,000 tons annually).”
In the past year huge piles of small logs at the Mendocino Redwood Company’s log deck on North State Street [in Ukiah] were chipped into sawdust and transported for use at the Mendocino Forest Product’s wood pellet production plant [in Calpella] and a huge plume of smoke has been emitted from the plant on nearly a daily basis. Since this plant is close to an elementary school and a health clinic to which tribal members from 10 tribes with compromised health issues attend, it is urgent for the public to pursue inquiries with the Air Quality Management District regarding the pollutant levels being emitted from the plant.
Polly Girvin, a SEIJ member, has spoken with the Director of the Air Quality Management District on the phone and at one office visit and found that:
The MRC plant has been found three times to be in violation of the operation permit it was issued by the Air Quality Management District due to impermissible levels of particulate matter pollution spewing from the plant’s smokestack, and recently MRC was once again found to be emitting impermissible levels of pollutants. All attempts to date to sufficiently lower pollution emanating from the plant to permissible levels have failed.
• The first violation of the permit was not found to be sufficiently corrected after the installation of a hammermill.
• A second violation occurred and as a mitigation measure MRC was made to install “monitoring technology” by the elementary school. Not sure if this monitoring device is by the Calpella Elementary School or the Waldorf School.
• At one point the uncorrected pollution levels were so grave that the plant had to reduce its production rate in order to comply with Particulate Matter emission rate limits specified in the permit issued for the plant by the Air Quality Management District.
• A third violation occurred recently and the report regarding this violation was “under review” when Ms. Girvin spoke with the Air Quality Management District Director.
The Air Quality Management District Director informed Ms. Girvin that to address the third permit violation MFP is now being required to install software technology in an attempt to make more uniform the size of pellets being burned. Non uniformity of particulate matter increases pollution emission.
Research results pertaining to the toxicity of wood pellet plant emission are as follows:
Environmental Impacts
Pellet production facilities release dangerous air pollutants including particulate matter and volatile organic compounds putting surrounding communities at higher risk for health complications.
“EIP’s survey reveals that these facilities emit dangerous amounts of air pollution and further finds that state agencies consistently fall well short of their duty to ensure that these facilities control their pollution to the levels required by law, frequently due to misleading information supplied by the industry.
Main source of information “is the drying process, as burning wood emits substantial amounts of fine particulate matter, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and greenhouse gases”.
Health Impacts
When wood pellets are first processed or chipped in mills, they release heavy amounts of carbon dioxide and harmful pollutants.
The processing and burning of wood pellets creates Volatile Compounds (VOC’s), particulate matter (PM), nitrogen oxide (NO) and carbon monoxide, all of which are detrimental to health.
MOST IMPORTANTLY FOR CHILDREN ATTENDING TWO ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS VERY CLOSE TO THE PLANT
Risk from air-borne pollutants which can cause or worsen cardiovascular and respiratory issues and cancers. Long term exposure to many of these pollutants, especially acetaldehyde and methanol, can also cause chronic symptoms and harm early childhood development.
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that short-term exposure to elevated levels of biomass combustion products could increase the risk of respiratory health issues. PM2.5 consists of airborne particles less than 2.5 micrometers which can pass deep into a person’s lungs and even into the bloodstream, causing heart attacks, decreased lung function, worsening asthma symptoms, and premature death. Many wood pellet mills frequently emit 60 to 80 tons per year of PM2.5 even after installing controls.
Breathing ozone created by wood pellet facilities “can trigger a variety of health problems, particularly to children, the elderly and people of all ages who have lung diseases such as asthma”.
SEIJ urges the Mendocino County Community and the recently appointed Mendocino County Climate Change Advisory Council to join us in investigating Mendocino Forest Product’s wood pellet plant’s particulate matter pollution levels that have to date found to be outside of the boundaries set forth in the permit issued for the facility. Of further concern, Supervisor McGowan in referencing the permit issued for the company indicated the plant is in an area zoned as industrial. This zoning designation should not allow for higher levels of pollution to be emitted from the plant given the proximity of two schools, an Indian Health Clinic and a Tribe.
Scientific research papers can be referenced for a more detailed discussion of the harmful health and environmental impacts of pollution emitted from wood pellet production plants.
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Michael Moore presents Planet of the Humans, a documentary that dares to say what no one else will this Earth Day — that we are losing the battle to stop climate change on planet earth because we are following leaders who have taken us down the wrong road — selling out the green movement to wealthy interests and corporate America. This film is the wake-up call to the reality we are afraid to face: that in the midst of a human-caused extinction event, the environmental movement’s answer is to push for techno-fixes and band-aids. It's too little, too late.
Removed from the debate is the only thing that MIGHT save us: getting a grip on our out-of-control human presence and consumption. Why is this not THE issue? Because that would be bad for profits, bad for business. Have we environmentalists fallen for illusions, “green” illusions, that are anything but green, because we’re scared that this is the end—and we’ve pinned all our hopes on biomass, wind turbines, and electric cars?
52 minutes into the film is about biomass. Watch the film:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet_of_the_Humans
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zk11vI-7czE
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