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Government facing legal challenge over burning trees for energy in net-zero plan

Rewilding charity The Lifescape Project, backed by the Partnership for Policy Integrity, filed an application for a judicial review in the High Court.

Rebecca Speare-Cole
Monday 13 November 2023 00:01 GMT
The Government is facing a legal challenge over its Biomass Strategy (Liam McBurney/PA)
The Government is facing a legal challenge over its Biomass Strategy (Liam McBurney/PA) (PA Archive)

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The Government is facing a legal challenge over its reliance on burning trees for green energy in its climate plans.

Rewilding charity The Lifescape Project, backed by the Partnership for Policy Integrity, filed an application for a judicial review in the High Court on Friday.

The case alleges that the Governmentā€™s Biomass Strategy ā€“ a key part of its transition plans ā€“ is unlawful and will undermine the UKā€™s ability to achieve net zero by 2050.

The strategy, published in August, outlines plans to generate energy by burning biomass and catching the carbon emissions before storing them below ground.

Not only will it cost billions of taxpayers' money but it will not even help achieve net zero

Elsie Blackshaw-Crosby, The Lifescape Project

This process, known as Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS), is claimed to create ā€œnegative emissionsā€ because the carbon released by burning wood is also absorbed by newly planted trees.

Biomass has been promoted as a carbon-neutral and renewable energy source on this basis while the industry claims the wood is sustainably sourced from forestry waste such as twigs and offcuts or newly grown forests, known as afforestation.

But scientists and activists have raised serious doubts over biomassā€™s sustainability, whether it can be considered renewable and what the role it can play in national net zero plans is.

Some argue that biomass creates an illusion of climate action while reliance on BECCS will cost billions, worsen forest destruction and delay more meaningful climate action.

The new legal case alleges that the Governmentā€™s Biomass Strategy fundamentally misrepresents the dangers of BECCS.

If successful, the court would declare that the decision to adopt the strategy should be quashed and ministers would be forced to withdraw it.

The legal team, which includes solicitors from Leigh Day as well as barristers Jessica Boyd KC, Ava Mayer and Peter Lockley, have filed evidence to demonstrate that the Governmentā€™s own arguments contradict advice from its advisory panel convened to support the Biomass Strategy.

The BECCS Task and Finish Group found that only biomass sourced from afforested areas might provide climate benefits but that most biomass burned in the UK will be sourced in the medium to short term from existing forests where trees are regrown to replace those cut down.

The case argues that the Government Strategy nonetheless continues to treat biomass as ā€œlow carbonā€.

It alleges that the Government received evidence from the US showing that the wood pellet industry is logging wetland hardwood forests in the US Southeast.

It also comes after a BBC panorama investigation found that logging forests for fuel has affected ancient and biodiverse forests in Canada.

Elsie Blackshaw-Crosby, managing lawyer at The Lifescape Project, said: ā€œDespite an abundance of evidence that logging forests for fuel is increasing climate pollution and destroying irreplaceable ecosystems, the governmentā€™s Biomass Strategy supports continued use of imported wood fuels and takes the false solution of biomass even further, relying extensively on BECCS to produce ā€˜negative emissionsā€™.

ā€œNot only will it cost billions of taxpayersā€™ money but it will not even help achieve net zero.

ā€œThis case calls on the government to assess and reflect the actual climate impacts of biomass and BECCS in their climate policy, a move that will force them to look at other renewable energy solutions.ā€

Ecosystem scientist Mary Booth, director at the Partnership for Policy Integrity, who has reviewed the Biomass Strategy and supporting analyses said: ā€œIt is greenwashing at the very, very, very highest level.ā€

Itā€™s astonishing to see the UK moving forward with promoting a technology that will cost tens of billions, but where they canā€™t produce any evidence it will actually remove CO2 from the atmosphere

Ecosystem scientist Mary Booth

Ms Booth told the PA news agency that the team hopes to see the UK case to reverberate across many countries which are touting BECCS as a climate solution.

She said: ā€œItā€™s astonishing to see the UK moving forward with promoting a technology that will cost tens of billions, but where they canā€™t produce any evidence it will actually remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

ā€œCommon sense tells us that burning trees and storing the carbon below ground isnā€™t going to produce ā€˜negative emissionsā€™, but, just as important, international rules for counting climate pollution show the maths doesnā€™t work.

ā€œThe UK governmentā€™s plans look more and more like a money-printing machine for the big companies that will benefit from the Biomass Strategy.ā€

Rowan Smith, a solicitor at Leigh Day, said: ā€œIn adopting the Biomass Strategy, it is argued that the Secretary of State failed to properly assure herself that the combustion of biomass will actually deliver the carbon savings claimed.

ā€œLifescape is urging the Government to drop the inclusion of forest biomass from its future energy plans and look to use other, genuinely renewable ways to generate power.ā€

The case has been filed in the Administrative Court on the grounds that the Governmentā€™s decision to adopt the Biomass Strategy breaches its obligation under the Climate Change Act to properly analyse the extent to which forest biomass energy and BECCS can make the required contribution to net zero.

It also alleges that the decision was irrational, based on inadequate inquiry and failed to take into account relevant considerations, such as the carbon impacts of forest biomass energy and BECCS, and was also based on a flawed, unfair consultation process.

Drax, which runs the UKā€™s largest biomass power plant in North Yorkshire and has received billions in renewable energy subsidies, could be affected by the case.

The company is trialling carbon capture and storage, which it claims will deliver negative emissions and has signalled to investors that it anticipates benefitting from new government BECCS policies.

A Department for Energy Security and Net Zero spokesperson said: ā€œWe cannot comment on ongoing legal proceedings.ā€

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