05 June 2013

From buckthorn to biofuel

A nature preserve in Anoka, Minnesota is doing battle with invasive buckthorn:
Nearly half of the 200-acre Anoka Nature Preserve along the Rum River has been cleared of snagging buckthorn and other invasive plants since February. Twenty-two semitrailer truckloads of vegetation have been shredded and hauled away already, and a nearly equal amount — a football field-sized pile, 15-feet high — will soon be obliterated by a 95,000-pound, 1,000-horsepower mulching machine.

The $179,000 project is part of a pilot program launched in 2008 by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, with the aim of restoring habitat and reaping a fuel source in the process...

“Before, the buckthorn was so dense you couldn’t see 30 feet ahead in the winter with all the gray stems. Now, you can see 250 feet and clearly see the big oak trees,” said Chris Lord, project manager for the Anoka Conservation District, which has overseen the project.

Soon, the stack of invasives will be gone, after the grinding machine turns them into mulch. It will take about 20 semitrailer trucks, each carrying about 20 tons, to haul the remaining material to St. Paul.

There it will help fire a boiler in the District Energy plant that provides steam heat and cooling for downtown homes and buildings, including the State Capitol, said Jeff Guillemette, biomass fuel manager for Environmental Wood Supply. Twenty truckloads would feed the boiler furnace for less than half a day, he said.

4 comments:

  1. Very intelligent--get rid of an invasive plant, then use the remains for a positive purpose.

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  2. I nearly bought a small buckthorn from a nursery until I researched it and found how invasive it was.

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    Replies
    1. Good grief! Did they also try to sell you garlic mustard?

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  3. On arbor day, at the free event in our central park, they give away chunks of buckthorn for free, to raise awareness of how awful it is, how much we need to cut it down, and how pretty much useless it is (none of the chunks is big enough to cut a board worth turning into furniture, for example) (but mulch is a great idea!)

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