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renewablejohn

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Everything posted by renewablejohn

  1. Yes I have been looking for woodland within 25 mile radius of my farm which makes it easier to comply with the RHI sustainable rules.
  2. I use 4 post stackable metal skillets originally from the car industry. Lifted with forwarding crane onto trailer then stacked back at the farm using fork lift. When you come to saw up skillet becomes log deck on fork lift.
  3. Anyone know how easy it is to get an untouched woodland classified as (RHI) sustainable and what sort of management plan would be needed. Have the ability to acquire 15 acres of land probably half being felling sized weeds the other half suitable for planting.
  4. Got a big chestnut ready for coming down as soon as the tree surgeon can find a saw big enough to cut it. Tree is in Bolton already taken 3 forwarding trailer loads with just the stem to dismantle. Might be worth your while having a look and if any good advise how you want it cutting.
  5. Well were now on the approved list let the red tape begin.
  6. Have mentioned in the past my father died at the age of 50 due to sawdust in the lungs mainly from Lignum Vitae. Be very careful and wear a good quality mask. I also wear engineers glasses to protect the eyes and muffs for the ears.
  7. For my Kesla its a 3k option.
  8. Ripped me off to the tune of 15k. Never again
  9. The SPM type flywheel machines make excellent briquettes but they sell for crazy money. My hydraulic machine produces acceptable briquettes but quality wise will always be at the low end of the market.
  10. Looking at there web site most of the equipment appears to be chinese so I would be concerned about quality. I have one of the chinese pellet presses only real use is as a paper weight. The Italian machine looks like my briquette press which is made by Comafer and produces briquettes but the quality is very poor and that includes using a hammer mill to reduce chip size.
  11. I dont know about being worth a bomb but it is certainly a bomb site with probably 75% windblown. Just cannot see at the moment how it will be economic to harvest as I need to cover minimum £400 per day just to break even.
  12. ok now cleared
  13. For those not familiar with what the government are doing. https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/304388/Biomass_Sustainability_Requirements_-_Info_Sheet.pdf
  14. In that case buy yourself a diesel heater and use the diesel direct. To get woodchip dry enough to briquette it needs to be less than 12% MC and you will probably still have to put it through a hammer mill to get it fine enough so that the briquettes hold together. Commercially they reckon equivalent of 15% of woodchip heat is used to dry the chip which if your paying in diesel will be very expensive.
  15. Its totally clear. If you dont burn compliant wood then you wont get paid your RHI. If you do burn non compliant wood and are caught then any RHI payments already made could be clawed back.
  16. Have a look at this dryer on the farming forum Storing & drying woodchips | The Farming Forum "Smoking" well steam actually
  17. I think someone does not understand the RHI rules and is trying to jump on a RHI bandwagon. If you look at the feedstock for most RHI or power generation installations it is woodchip or wood pellets. Yes the price of RHI certified woodchip will go up and you can expect a premium over non certified woodchip. Be interested to find out what Stobarts are paying for RHI certified woodchip I doubt whether its much more than £10 per tonne.
  18. Its in America's interest to reduce Europes energy from Russia as Europe is already awash with cheap American coal and export of LNG (gas) and biomass is being ramped up.
  19. Very little to do with Russia its been coming for a while but the fine detail is only now being resolved. Legal and sustainable forest source requirements for woodfuel — Central Point of Expertise on Timber Procurement (CPET)
  20. In the short term the biomass for power stations will be mainly from Canada as the majority of there woodlands are already certified as sustainable. In the long term Canada may be less of an option as the targets are reduced making the long distance transport costs prohibitive.
  21. It will produce a 2 tier market. Woodlands certified as sustainable able to supply RHI and the power stations with very high prices due to supply and demand. Woodlands not certified will add to the timber from tree surgery to create an overall glut. I can still see a market for non sustainable hardwood but non sustainable softwood prices will fall though the floor.
  22. For the price of a backhoe you could pick up a good 3 tonne 360. There to heavy to tow behind 4WD so are as cheap as chips. No problem for you to tow with an alpine and far more versatile. I have a Hitachi EX30 bought for a specific job of creating a surge pool to stop the house flooding but now be lost without it.
  23. Anyone interested in Lodge Pole processor size 3mtr lengths but not sustainable forest so useless for RHI and Biomass power station sales. Timber near Bolton Lancs and will be in 3 mtr lengths roadside on good tarmac access road. Its all windblown so trying to work out whether it is economic to harvest. Initial quantity upto 200 tonnes.
  24. Been looking for a wood for months and finally found one. Owner willing to rent and allow me to extract the windblown lodge pole which is about 75% of the wood. Only trouble is its not in a sustainable forest scheme and the owner is not interested in such a scheme. Am I right in thinking the woodland is worthless as I cannot sell the timber due to the sustainability criteria.
  25. I dont understand the significance of the calculation is it some sort of vetting to reduce fuel miles.

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