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Tuesday, August 04, 2015 8:25:35 PM
As I understand it, the business model is based largely, maybe not entirely, on replacing natural gas (that competitors use) with biomass (that BION will rely upon).
The idea is biomass is cheaper than natural gas. Is it?
I thought that natural gas has become plentiful and is relatively inexpensive. The cost has gone down from eight years ago. Isn't biomass now relatively expensive?
If the plant in north Florida is the first built, it is not near an urban center with cheap construction debris. That plant will have to rely, seems to me, on logging debris. But logging slash is spread over the harvest area - sometimes hundreds of acres. It is expensive to collect (diesel tractors, tractor drivers) and to transport. And logging debris, by weight, is 50 percent water.
Is there any cost/manufacturing data indicating the breakeven point for natural gas versus biomass?
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