美国南部木屑颗粒生产和欧洲“可再生”能源出口

E. Shumway
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摘要

近年来,由于对碳中和的误解,欧洲对木屑颗粒的需求激增。目前的法律框架假设,简单地替换采伐的树木,使燃烧木屑颗粒的能源使用可再生能源。这种过度简化没有考虑到许多因素,包括原始天然林和替代单一栽培人工林之间固碳能力的差异,大气中二氧化碳排放的累积影响,以及替代树木吸收与采伐树木一样多的碳所需的年数。欧盟和英国目前可以利用燃烧木屑颗粒造成的排放“减少”来实现国内可再生能源目标以及《巴黎协定》下的承诺。欧洲对木屑颗粒需求的相应增加导致了美国南部木屑颗粒生产的热点,带来了几个重大后果。本文介绍了美国南部历史上边缘化社区不断增长的木屑颗粒行业对环境正义和气候变化的影响,并仔细研究了北卡罗来纳州哈姆雷特的Enviva木屑颗粒厂。它概述了美国,欧盟,英国和国际环境法在保护全球气候和当地社区免受木屑颗粒生产和燃烧影响方面的不足之处。本文以呼吁改变IPCC和欧盟用于能源用途的木材的碳核算规则为基础,提出了解决国际环境法中木屑颗粒困境的环境正义方面的解决方案:即在《联合国气候变化框架公约》巴黎协定中增加环境正义保障措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Wood Pellet Production in the U.S. South and Exportation for ‘Renewable’ Energy in Europe
In recent years, European demand for wood pellets has surged due to a misconception of carbon neutrality. The current legal frameworks posit that simply replacing a harvested tree renders the burning of wood pellets for energy use renewable energy. This oversimplification does not consider a number of factors, including the difference in carbon sequestration capabilities between original, natural forests and replacement monoculture plantations, the cumulative impact of CO2 emissions in the atmosphere, and the years required for a replacement tree to sequester as much carbon as the harvested tree. The EU and U.K. can currently utilize emissions “reductions” due to burning wood pellets to reach domestic renewable energy goals along with commitments under the Paris Agreement. The corresponding increase in demand for wood pellets in Europe has resulted in a hotspot of wood pellet production in the U.S. South with several significant consequences. This Note presents the environmental justice and climate change impacts of the growing wood pellet industry in historically marginalized communities in the U.S. South, with a close look at the Enviva wood pellet plant in Hamlet, North Carolina. It provides an overview of the inadequacies of U.S., EU, U.K., and international environmental law in protecting both the global climate and local communities from the impacts of wood pellet production and combustion. This Note then builds on calls to change IPCC and EU carbon accounting rules for wood harvested for energy use to propose a solution to the environmental justice side of the wood pellet dilemma in international environmental law: namely, adding environmental justice safeguards to the UNFCCC Paris Agreement.
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