U.S. Senator Daniel Akaka and U.S. Representatives Neil Abercrombie and Mazie Hirono helped launch Hawaii's newest renewable energy project at a Hawaiian blessing ceremomy for the Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility in the community of Pepeekeo, on the Big Island's Hamakua Coast.
"Projects like the Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility play an important role in shifting Hawaii's energy mix away from imported petroleum toward renewable sources."
-- Dan KenKnight, Director, Hu Honua BioEnergy LLC
Financed, operated and majority-owned by MMA Renewable Ventures, the 24-megawatt (MW) power station will convert locally grown biomass into electricity, supporting the state’s target of 20% renewable energy by 2020.
Local union leader Rickard Baker, division director of ILWU 142 Hawaii, said that more than 95% of the area’s residents approached have signed a petition in support of converting the coal-fired plant into a biomass-to-energy facility.
“Like its name, which means ‘to come out of the earth,’ Hu Honua turns to the land to effectively and sustainably meet Hawaii’s power needs,” said Dan KenKnight, director of Hu Honua BioEnergy LLC. “Projects like the Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility play an important role in shifting Hawaii’s energy mix away from imported petroleum toward renewable sources. Our partners at MMA Renewable Ventures bring to the project the management and operational expertise needed to ensure that Hu Honua continues delivering reliable clean energy for decades to come.”
Supplying energy directly to the regional utility grid, Hu Honua will deliver enough for approximately 7-10 percent of the island’s total energy needs. Employing plant materials that otherwise go unused, the power plant will stimulate the local agricultural industry and prevent tens of thousands of tons of green waste from taking up scarce space in Hawaii County’s landfills each year, according to Hu Hona BioEnergy. The project is also expected to create hundreds of local jobs.
It's great that less biomass is going to the landfill but why not burn household waste as well (once it's had all recyclable and reuseable things removed) - many countries are too slow off the mark in this area and need to learn from countries like Denmark where they have no landfills.
Mitigating this offensive plan to pay top dollar and use fossil-fuels to ship our trash "somewhere else" is a very late plan by the city to expand the existing H-power garbage-to-energy plant to allow it to accommodate our growing waste stream.
Sadly this key issue receives attention approximately in proportion with its political sex-appeal. Unlike the absurd, mind-bogglingly-expensive fixed-rail plan the mayor is determined to force down our throats [sexy as hell since everyone is directly affected by daily traffic] - but very much LIKE the issue of our ancient, sieve-like sewage systems, all but abandoned until, say, a record-setting spill makes national news - it's a matter of what area of focus gets city politicians re-elected.
When you can't get around because of traffic-jams and your touted solution is like buying buggy-whip futures, and you have to ship in 80% of what you consume and now you're looking at paying to send it out again, and your sewage system is held together by bubble gum and bailing wire, what you have is the antithesis of "sustainable."
Yet that's still the favorite buzzword.
-- Dan KenKnight, Director, Hu Honua BioEnergy LLC
Which is nice and all...but the article refers to a converted coal fired plant. Last time I checked, coal ain't petroleum.
You can readc about it in an article at
http://www.bigislandweekly.com/articles/2008/08/06/read/news/news08.txt
part of the article
"So who is Hu Honua? According to Tim Lasocki, MMA Renewable's vice president of wind and bioenergy business development and project finance, Hu Honua is co-owned by ERH and MMA, with ERH being the technical side and MMA being the financial backer.
This is another thing Pepe'ekeo residents are concerned about.
Between June 8 and July 16, Muni Mae's stock plummeted from $25.55 per share to $1.25, allegedly due to claims of filing false earnings reports and insider trading. The company has been de-listed from the stock exchange, and is now being sold over the counter with pink slips. According to Business Week magazine, Muni Mae is embroiled in nine different class-action lawsuits based on claims of Securities and Exchange Commission fraud and insider trading.
Additionally, the asphyxiating lender has retained the services of Bermuda-based Lazard Ltd., a specialist in mergers and acquisitions, to "consider strategic alternatives to enhance shareholder value, including but not limited to the raising of capital through the sale or recapitalization of business units and additional asset sales." ("Municipal Mortgage Mulls Options," press release, 6/26/08).
In short, Muni Mae is having a fire sale."
Not exactly the type of people you want to have as neighbors or to tie your energy future to.
I am in favor of Biomass and other renewables, but this one smells ...literally. Hu Honua is just doing this for the credits.
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