Power plants swapping their coal for renewable fuel sources seems to be a growing trend, and Hawaii looks to add this idea to the host of other sustainable practices the state has been implementing. Hawaii has just finished a blessing ceremony for the Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility on Big Island’s Hamakua Coast.
The 24 MW plant is a project of MMA Renewable Ventures and will supply about 7-10% of the island’s power needs – or enough for about 18,000 homes. The fuel source is plant waste that would otherwise go into landfills. Residents are excited about the project, which is expected to generate hundreds of local jobs. Their excitement was documented in the fact that a whopping 95% of residents approached with a petition to convert the power plant from coal to biomass went ahead and signed the petition.
The conversion helps Hawaii meet the goal of having 20% of its energy come from renewable resources by 2020, and in turn helps all of us get an eensy bit closer to ending our use of coal.
Via RenewableEnergyWorld, MM Renewable Ventures

written by Susie, September 03, 2008
The statement that they will be burning waste that would otherwise be going into a landfill is nonsense. The tree resources would either be used for value-added products and/or energy; no one is talking about harvesting trees and throwing them into the landfill.
Further, biomass is not truly renewable, there are a lot of questions about sustainable tree resources here on the island (which by the way Hu Honua does not own). And biomass is NOT clean green energy, it is a smokestack industry with emissions that fall under state and federal regulation. There are problems with the burning of eucalyptus, the primary tree resource here— high hydrogen chloride levels that skyrocket above EPA limits as well as other pollutants that must be controlled by the very best available control technology (BACT).
We are fighting a similar power plant project in my community of Ookala, about 20 miles north of this one you’ve posted about in Pepeekeo. Truly clean green renewable energy is geothermal, solar and wind and that’s where our island should be headed in answer to energy needs— we have an abundance of all three. If the tree resource is going to be used for energy, ethanol production might be a better choice if clean and green is truly the goal.
written by Paul Barthle, September 03, 2008
written by litteuldav, September 03, 2008
Deforestation seems to be what killed many Pacific island like Easter Island, Mangareva and its satellites. (cf book from Jared Diamond : Collapse)
Looks like hawaii should be all powered by geothermal, with electric golf carts for everybody.
Is this an american way of life to waste every single ressource they have ?
written by Susie, September 04, 2008
litteu, the tree resource in question is a commercial euc plantation, already planted on old sugar plantation land, so the harvesting would not be deforestation of our wild rain forests. However, many here would like to see the commercial trees used for other than polluting power plants. For energy, ethanol production would be cleaner alternative.
written by Ramen Owens, September 11, 2008
written by wake up, October 02, 2008
written by Garrett Smith, PE, December 03, 2008
written by why not the truth, January 01, 2009
written by check out the whole mess, May 02, 2009
written by Just G, June 08, 2009
Also Hu Honua is fighting not to install new clean air technology. The plant used to produce a black smoke cloud that made it difficult for residence to breathe. There are houses within 100 feet of the plant gate. Currently the plant is shutdown and would not run on coal, so claiming they are converting it is just a lie. They are trying to start a 40 year old plant without upgrading it to new source standards.
Every single community group within 5 miles of the plant is against it not because they don't want to see progress but because the technology is old, the stack is dirty, and Hu Honua can't be trusted. If we want to see real biomass technology, then we need to install a gasification plant, not a wood burning stove!
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A power plant that is creating jobs AND runs on garbage that would end up in landfill? Why isn't this news plastered all over every media in every country? Really!
This could be an incredible step forwards in addressing two major issues - what we do with our waste; where to get green energy.
I sincerely hope this is as simple a concept and green as it sounds. If so, there's no reason why power stations all over the world can't be converted.
Excellent news.
Steve N. Lee
author of eco-blog http://www.lionsledbysheep.com
and suspense thriller 'What if...?'