HELCO signs contract to buy biomass electricity
News Release from Hu Honua
Hawaii Electric Light Company and Hu Honua Bioenergy has announced the signing of a Power Purchase Agreement to provide Hawaii Island with 21.5 megawatts (MW) of renewable, dispatchable firm capacity fueled by locally grown biomass.
Over the 20-year term of the agreement, the Hu Honua facility at Pepeekeo on the Hamakua Coast would supply electricity at pricing not tied to the price of oil.
The agreement requires approval by the state Public Utilities Commission (PUC), with input from the state Division of Consumer Advocacy.
Hu Honua Bioenergy is converting the former Pepeekeo Sugar Mill into a modern, efficient electric generation facility using renewable biofuel, including locally grown biomass, such as eucalyptus. The facility will consist of a biomass fuel yard, steam boiler, turbine and generator. The previous plant used sugar cane waste and later, coal.
Estimates are that Hu Honua will be able to supply about 10 percent of the island’s electricity needs. The plant is anticipated to be completed approximately 18 months after refurbishment begins.
“Hu Honua’s facility will supply us firm renewable energy at prices that are stable and not tied to the unpredictable world oil market and that is good for our customers,” said Jay Ignacio, president of HELCO. “With the addition of Hu Honua to the HELCO power grid, over 50 percent of our island’s electricity will be provided by renewable resources.”
“Hu Honua will displace about 250,000 barrels of oil per year, keeping that money in the local economy,” said John Sylvia, CEO of Hu Honua.
The project will also support the local economy by creating about 80 to 100 jobs during the refurbishment phase and about 28 to 30 jobs when the facility begins operation; another 100 indirect jobs are anticipated in the timber and related industries.
“We look forward to providing dispatchable renewable energy to the grid, which complements the integration of intermittent sources such as wind and solar,” Sylvia said. “Our biomass-to-electricity process is cleaner than fossil fuel, is efficient and makes use of existing sustainable biomass on the island.”
— Find out more:
HELCO: www.helcohi.com
Hu Honua Bioenergy: www.huhonua.com
SA: Big Island facility to burn eucalyptus trees for electricity
Hu Honua’s power purchase agreement with HELCO is subject to approval by the Public Utilities Commission. Neither Hu Honua nor HELCO would disclose the price of the electricity.
“Hu Honua’s facility will supply us firm, renewable energy at prices that are stable and not tied to the unpredictable world oil market and that is good for our customers,” said Jay Ignacio, president of HELCO.
He said once the Hu Honua facility is connected to the grid more than half of the electricity consumed on Hawaii island’s will be from renewable sources.
The Broken Trust Connection:
The Hamakua Sugar Company lands bought by the Broken Trustees of Kamehameha Schools and ‘guarded’ by Larry Mehau for $$$ were planted in Eucalyptus. Years later, the trees not properly culled have grown into 10,000 plus acres of pencil thin stands with zero lumber value. It is either burn them or ship them to Japan for paper mills so they to be burned. Today’s pollution is an expression of yesterday’s corruption.