Spain approves country’s largest biomass plant

Spain approved the construction of the country’s largest biomass plant, according to the renewable energy group Ence. Government approval was necessary as the plant, to be built in the southern town of Huelva, will use state aid set aside for renewable...

Spain approved the construction of the country’s largest biomass plant, according to the renewable energy group Ence.

Government approval was necessary as the plant, to be built in the southern town of Huelva, will use state aid set aside for renewable energy projects.

The factory will have a capacity of 50 megwatts and will supply green energy to some 400,000 people, Ence said in a state-ment.

It represents an investment of more than €100 million, said Ence, which has drawn up a short list of three companies – Tecnicas Reunidas, OHL and Acciona-Idom to build the plant.

According to experts, biomass energy plants, which are fired by organic matter ranging from agricultural waste such as straw or manure to forest waste products, can have C02 emissions up to 60 per cent lower than facilities using fossil fuels.

In Spain last year, it made up only 1.3 per cent of energy production, compared to 12.5 per cent for wind farms.

Ence describes itself as Spain’s “leading company in renewable energy through the use of biomass residue and energy crops” and “manages approximately 116,000 hectares of forests in Spain, Portugal, and Uruguay”.

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