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Rawmaterial Supply and Harvesting Techniques

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... for industrial wood will as bi-products produce branches, tree tops and small delimbed stems ... High nutritional content. Supply and harvesting techniques ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rawmaterial Supply and Harvesting Techniques


1
Rawmaterial Supply and Harvesting Techniques
  • Gunnar Bäck
  • Globetrotter AB

2
Introduction
  • Overview of Scandinavian harvesting techniques
    for forest residues
  • Residues in this context
  • Branches
  • Tree tops
  • Brushwood
  • Stumps
  • Small trees
  • Non commercial small trees
  • Presentation based on
  • Experts from Sweden, Finland Denmark
  • My own 30 years of experience in the harvesting
    field

3
Supply and usage of wood based fuels
  • Sweden
  • Biofuels incl. Peat account for 114 TWh of
    totally 637 TWh
  • Close to 18 of total energy usage
  • Of this wood based fuel accounts for 8 (2005)
  • or 25M m³ solid volume per year
  • Finland
  • Biofuels incl. Peat account for 97 TWh of totally
    379 TWh
  • Close to 26 of total energy usage
  • Of this wood based fuel accounts for 10 (2005)
  • or 18M m³ solid volume per year

4
Assessment of quantities of wood fuel
  • Almost all forest residue (90) is processed in
    conjunction with procurement of industrial wood
    as well as in conjunction with processing of
    industrial wood in sawmills and in pulp- and
    paper mills
  • In Scandinavia you have a wood fuel potential of
    up to 45 of the amount of harvested volume for
    industrial purposes

5
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6
Key factors in the supply chain
  • Normal harvesting system
  • Almost all harvesting operations for industrial
    wood in Sweden and Finland are based on the fully
    mechanied CTL-system (Cut-To-Length)
  • The normal harvesting system for industrial wood
    will as bi-products produce branches, tree tops
    and small delimbed stems

7
Key factors in the supply chain
  • Common features of forest residues
  • Small dimensions on a piece basis
  • Low value on a piece basis
  • Low energy content in relation to fossil fuels
  • Low density from a transport point of view
  • Low concentration fram an area point of view
  • Scattered availability
  • High procurement costs on a piece basis for
    collection and transport
  • High nutritional content

8
Key factors in the supply chain
Development work
  • Collection
  • Multi functioning, accumulative felling head,
    which collects the cut trees
  • Combination harvester, equipped with multi-
    functioning harvester head and a chipper
  • Industrial wood
  • Forest residue

9
Key factors in the supply chain
Development work
  • Transportation
  • Increase of load density
  • Special bundling technology that increases the
    density of the load

10
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11
Harvesting systems
  • Location of chipper/crusher
  • At the stump
  • At roadside or at the landing
  • At the plant
  • Supply chains
  • Initial investment
  • Productivity
  • Production capacity
  • Cost per produced unit

12
Harvesting systems
  • Supply Chain 1
  • Harvest of industrial wood
  • Transport of loose residuals with special
    forwarder
  • Chipping in forest or at landing
  • Supply Chain 2
  • Harvest of thinning material
  • Chipping along strip road
  • Transport to roadside of chips with special
    forwarder

13
Harvesting systems
  • Supply Chain 3
  • Harvest of industrial wood
  • Baling of forest residues
  • Transport of bales with standard forwarder to
    landing
  • Chipping at roadside or at plant
  • Supply Chain 4
  • Harvest of industrial wood in combination machine
  • Chipping in the stand with combination machine
  • Transport to roadside of chips with special
    forwarder

14
Harvesting systems
General experience
  • Chipping at the stump is favourable when
  • Forwarding distances of lt250m
  • Where chipping can not take place at plant
  • Chipping at landing is favourable when
  • Forwarding distances of gt250m
  • Large chipping volumes at each landing
  • Chipping at plant is favourable when
  • Large consumption of forest residues at each
    specific plant

15
Conclusions
  • The increase in prices of fossil fuels that was
    originated by the first Oil Crisis of the 70ies
  • The limited resources of oil and gas
  • The Greenhouse effect that was a major issue in
    the Kyoto protocol
  • all lead to an increased market for bioenergy

16
Conclusions
  • Wood fuels are good alternatives for replacement
    of parts of the consumption of fossil fuels
  • In particular forest residues are still not
    utilised to a large degree
  • The competiveness of forest residues from a
    pricing point of view has up to a few a years ago
    not been good
  • However at present it has become an interesting
    alternative from an economical as well as from an
    environmental point of view due to the price
    increases of fossil fuels during the last few
    years

17
Conclusions
  • Recent developments in the harvesting techniques
    for forest residues have increased the
    competitiveness of forest residues and we are
    only in the beginning of this development
  • Forest residues are an important part of the
    solution of the global energy issue

18
Ladies and gentlemen Thank you for your attention
  • Gunnar Bäck
  • Globetrotter AB
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