Logo
ART
ISSUE #33.46 • NEWS • NEWS STORY
[ENVIRONMENT]

Bull Crap


Critics question the green cred of NW Natural’s new “Smart Energy” program.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 7 comments
Recently in "News"

November 19th, 2008
Meltdown Lowdown | So how is Portland’s new, new economy looking now?0 comments

November 19th, 2008
Letters to the Editor • Inbox0 comments

November 19th, 2008
The Tragic 8 Pall | One more thing from California for Oregonians to object to: Prop 8.2 comments

November 19th, 2008
Tug Of War | A controversial prof creates a skirmish at PSU over academic freedom. 11 comments

November 19th, 2008
Rogue of the Week • Butch Miller | Un-fare play.8 comments

November 19th, 2008
Nonviolent Femmes | Sisters of the Road invites Portland to come learn the steps of the nonviolent movement.0 comments

November 19th, 2008
Murmurs • News That Needs No Background Check18 comments

November 19th, 2008
Off The Mic | Local hip-hop artist faces extortion charge just before his album debuts.7 comments

November 19th, 2008
Cover Story • House Of Gain | Aleksey Kalenichenko’s real-estate schemes cost banks hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s still a mystery how he pulled it off.7 comments

November 19th, 2008
The Weekly Fix • The Weekly Fix | Our Spin On 7 Days of News0 comments



IMAGE: chad crowe
BY JAMES PITKIN | jpitkin at wweek dot com

[September 26th, 2007] By James Pitkin jpitkin@wweek.com

Starting this week, bills mailed to NW Natural gas customers will include a pitch to cut greenhouse gases by investing in the company’s new “Smart Energy” program.

For just $6 a month, the utility’s 590,000 customers in Portland and throughout Oregon are told they can reduce their carbon footprint by helping to build a “biodigester” somewhere in the state that converts methane from dairy-cow manure into renewable energy.

But critics say what hasn’t been reported is that the plan being sold as an environmentally responsible program to customers actually subsidizes an unsustainable and ecologically destructive form of agriculture: the factory farm. How? By subsidizing those large farms’ waste disposal.

“Portlanders want green energy, but they don’t want their energy coming from industrial factory farms,” says Kendra Kimbirauskas, a Portland-based consultant for the GRACE Factory Farm Project, a New York-based nonprofit that opposes industrial farming.

To be fair, NW Natural isn’t hyping manure energy to customers as “green power,” although it’s regarded as such under state law. It’s merely selling investment in the program as a carbon offset: By funding a biodigester to help reduce methane, a greenhouse gas, customers are told they can make up for the carbon they emit with their natural-gas use.

Yet the program is billed as a way to help the environment. And opponents of factory farms say that’s a deceptive sales pitch.

“What they’re actually doing is subsidizing the waste problem for large factory farms,” says Nicolette Hahn Niman, a rancher and environmental lawyer from Bolinas, Calif., who’s written critically of such projects in The New York Times and other publications.

A costly headache for large dairy farms is how to dispose of the manure their herds produce—14.4 million pounds a day in Oregon alone.

One solution is to use biodigesters—a technology that’s currently in vogue in Europe. Ranging from 10,000 to 40,000 square feet in size, biod take methane—a greenhouse gas emitted by manure that’s 23 times more harmful to the atmosphere than CO2—and burn it, using the heat to generate electricity.

Critics say biodigesters don’t live up to their eco-friendly reputation, because after the methane is trapped, they still leave large amounts of solid waste behind.















icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

In theory, that waste can be sold as fertilizer. But few biodigesters exist in the United States because they don’t pay off without outside investment. That’s where NW Natural comes in—with the help of as many customers as it can persuade.

Shareholders in the Portland-based gas provider voluntarily agreed this month to offset the carbon emissions from heating the company’s facilities by investing $77,000 in the project. Now they’re offering customers the chance to offset their carbon emissions by investing as well. The company hopes 3 percent to 4 percent of its Oregon customers kick in $4.4 million in five years.

The project allows NW Natural customers “to make a positive climate impact,” says Jed Jorgensen, spokesman for the Portland-based nonprofit the Climate Trust, a partner in the project and one of the nation’s leading organizers of carbon-offset programs.

But if “Smart Energy” is good for the environment, it presents an even sweeter deal for any big dairy farms that end up with biodigesters.

Details of the project are still uncertain—the Climate Trust is currently shopping for farms and engineering firms to take it on. But Sean Clark, director of offset programs at the Climate Trust, says the deal may look like this:

An engineering firm will agree to build a biodigester on a large farm at a cost of $2 million to $4 million.

The farmer will lease his land to the project, and besides collecting rent, will get a portion of the revenue from selling the energy and fertilizer that’s produced. The farm also gets a way to dispose of its waste for free—with the help of NW Natural customers, who provide an additional revenue stream by purchasing the carbon offset.

“We’ve been told for the last 30 years that you need these big factory farms because they’re more economically efficient. So why can’t they pay for their own waste management?” Niman asks. “You’re subsidizing their nonsustainable way of farming by infusing money into the system.”

Clark says the program never set out to reform agriculture. “We’re not changing that with...carbon offset,” he says. “This is a good technological and environmental solution to a problem which is not going away.”

Oregon’s 120,000 dairy cows on 350 farms produce 120 pounds of manure per cow a day, totaling 14.4 million pounds.

Rate This Story
4.5 average/6 votes

 
read all 7 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Bull Crap”

3

Ahhh, Steve, its called MONEY and Profits and Scapegoating.

Any similarity to off-setting carbon footprints and these cockamamie ideas is not! Just another way for the good-doer's a...

KISS, Sep 27th, 2007 8:09am
4

We don't have a global warming problem, we have a massive overpopulation problem.

Anyone who tries to address warming without reducing population growth is tilting at windmills.

Gnuut, Sep 27th, 2007 9:03am
5

The September 26 article, 'Bull Crap' raises several important issues, but misses the big picture.

The Smart Energy program is innovative and important. Currently, NW Natural is the...

Jed Jorgensen, Sep 28th, 2007 12:30pm
6

To the extent that PGE's intended investment helps out factory farming and dairy and beef operations, it may be counter-productive from a greenhouse gas standpoint. A recent 400+ page document from th...

Peter Spendelow, Oct 5th, 2007 11:34am
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
November 20th 2008House Of Gain | Aleksey Kalenichenko’s real-estate schemes cost banks hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s still a mystery how he pulled it off.
November 20th 2008Just Add Milk | Director Gus Van Sant delivers the story of the gay-rights movement’s patron saint in his most political film to date.
November 20th 2008Core Issue | Barack Obama says the way we pay teachers is rotten. Does Bill Sizemore (Bill Sizemore?!) have the answer?
November 20th 2008Ad Nauseam | Do TV ads about hot dogs, golf clubs and rape work? We bring in the experts.
November 20th 2008WW Voters’ Guide, November 2008 | Tough choices, no brainers: Our endorsements for the general election.
November 20th 2008Unlucky Strike | The Oregon lottery is going into detox—and our state budget is along for the smoke-free ride.
November 20th 2008Jail Junkies | Who knows more about stopping property crime: Kevin Mannix or an ex-addict who stole 1,000 cars?
November 20th 2008Shipracked | Judy Shiprack wants to be your next county commissioner. Here’s what she doesn’t want you to know about a real-estate deal gone bad.
November 20th 2008Señor Smith | Low-wage Latino workers keep Sen. Gordon Smith’s family business humming. Not all of them are legal.