Wood Pellet Exports from N. America to Europe Up Over 70%
Global Timber and Wood Products Market
Update
- a news brief
from Wood Resources International
LLC
Wood pellet exports from North
America to Europe were up over 70% in the 3Q/12
year-over-year, reports the North American Wood Fiber
Review
Rapid expansion
of wood pellet production in both the US South and British
Columbia has dramatically increased pellet exports from
North America to Europe the past year, according to the
North American Wood Fiber Review. In the 3Q/12, total
shipments were up 70 percent year-over-year to 860,000 tons.
The growth is expected to continue with numerous plans for
adding capacity, particularly in the US
South.
Seattle, USA.
Pellet exports from the two primary
pellet-producing regions on the North American continent,
the US South and British Columbia, continued to increase in
the 3Q/12 and reached a new record of 860,000 tons.
Shipments in the 3Q/12 were over 70 percent higher than the
same quarter in 2011, according to the North American Wood
Fiber Review (www.woodprices.com), which compiles and
publishes pellet trade based on customs data and surveys of
pellet exporters each quarter. Pellet exports from the US
South have skyrocketed the past two years with a quadrupling
to 485,000 tons from the 3Q/10 to 3Q/12 to the 485,000 tons.
Canadian exports have also gone up the past few years, but
at a slower pace. Beyond the trade statistics tracking the
rise of pellet export volumes, another spate of export
pellet plant announcements – detailed in the NAWFR –
emphasized the quickly growing trade relations that are
being established between European power utilities and US
pellet producers. The most striking announcement came in
mid-December when Drax, a United Kingdom power company,
stated its intention to build two 450,000 tons pellet
plants, one in the state of Louisiana and one in
Mississippi. Most other exportoriented pellet plants, while
invested in by European utilities, are separate US-based
entities, with supply agreements and MOU’s defining the
business relationship. The three major European pellet
import countries remain the UK, the Netherlands, and
Belgium, while Italy, Denmark and Sweden are notably
involved in pellet imports from North America, but on a much
smaller scale. Denmark’s Dong Energy utility, however,
announced its intentions to switch to woody biomass at three
of its coal plants, an action likely to add demand from the
US Southeast.
Announced US South pellet export plants increased sharply in the 2nd half of 2012. Export pellet facilities, which are under construction, conversion or redesigned will add an additional 1.7 million tons of capacity during 2013, as reported in the NAWFR. In addition to these plants that are already under construction, five additional plants have been announced, and if they are actually built on the disclosed sites, they would bring another 2.3 million tons of capacity into play by the end of 2014.
The North American Wood Fiber Review has tracked
wood fiber markets in the US and Canada for over 20 years
and it is the only publication that includes prices for
sawlogs, pulpwood, wood chips and biomass in North America.
The 36-page quarterly report includes wood market updates
for 15 regions on the continent in addition to the latest
export statistics for sawlogs, wood pellets and wood
chips.
www.woodprices.com
ENDS