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Saturday, June 7, 2025

Wood Pellets: America's Underrated Power Play

 by Darrell Smith, Executive Director of the U.S. Industrial Pellet Association via RealClearEnergy,

In an energy conversation dominated by buzzwords and breakthroughs, it’s easy to overlook the quiet, proven solutions that are already delivering results. Exhibit A: wood pellets.

These compact cylinders aren’t flashy or trend on social media. For the uninitiated, they are carriers of renewable carbon and energy, sourced from responsibly managed forests; a real, scalable, domestic resource that delivers energy security, climate value, and rural jobs while sustaining and growing forests. Wood pellets are emerging as one of the smartest plays in America’s energy and climate portfolio.

The Math Works

Let’s be clear: climate solutions need to scale. We need terawatts of clean power, gigatons of carbon removal, and a replacement for fossil carbon in sectors where options are limited. Think steel mills, cargo ships, aviation fuel, and cement plants — industries that can’t rely on solar panels and wind turbines.

Enter forest biomass. Every year, America’s 360 million acres of privately-owned forests grow more wood than we harvest. Driven by strong markets for wood products, these forests are powerful carbon sinks that have been growing since the 1950s when regenerative forestry practices became the norm.

Responsible forest management, the kind that thins out fuel for wildfires, not only keeps forests healthy but also supplies feedstock for wood pellets. These pellets burn clean, emit fewer particulates than coal, are carbon-neutral, and have the potential to be carbon-negative when sourced sustainably. In other words, we’re turning forest byproducts into a strategic asset instead of a forest fire risk and ensuring more investment into our nation’s forests.

Valued at $1.75 billion, the U.S. led the world last year in wood pellet exports — heating homes and decarbonizing power grids from Cambridge to Copenhagen. That’s not just a climate win. It’s a geopolitical and economic one. Furthermore, there are ample opportunities to increase use domestically.

 The Digital Surge: Data Centers Meet Biomass

Data centers are growing at breakneck pace. From streaming to AI, every click and query demands energy. These facilities already consume nearly 3% of global electricity, and that figure is climbing fast. In the U.S. alone, data center energy demand is expected to double by 2030.

While tech companies make pledges to run on “100% renewable,” achieving this goal is challenging. Intermittent renewables like wind and solar can’t always deliver the 24/7 baseload power data centers require. Wind and power are not the silver bullet many had hoped, because expensive batteries must be manufactured and installed to account for their lack of reliability. Meanwhile, wood pellets offer a firm, dispatchable, renewable fuel that can complement the grid and provide the consistent power backbone data infrastructure needs, without the carbon price tag of fossil fuels.

Speed is also a challenge. AI infrastructure is being developed on start-up timelines, but the grids meant to supply power are often hampered by multi-year planning cycles and limited capacity. Utilizing the existing biomass fleet or retrofitting coal-fired power stations to run on sustainable biomass bypasses these time-intensive and costly barriers. These sites are already grid-connected, often already have relevant permits, and crucially a coal-to-biomass conversion can be completed in under two years.

A Carbon-Negative Future? Biomass is the Feedstock

There’s another dimension to this story. Biomass isn’t just an energy source; it’s a carbon solution. Engineered carbon removal technologies like Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) require a steady, sustainable feedstock to function at scale. That feedstock needs to be renewable, reliable, and available today. Wood pellets fit that bill.

When wood pellets are used in BECCS systems, they generate power and remove CO₂ from the atmosphere at the same time, locking it away underground or turning it into usable materials like concrete, fuels, or even long-lived bioplastics. That’s negative emissions. Not net zero. Below zero.

With private markets pouring billions into carbon removal innovation, the need for biogenic carbon is accelerating. Whether it’s carbon-negative electricity, sustainable aviation fuel or green hydrogen, they all have one thing in common: they start with a reliable renewable carbon stream. Wood pellets and woody biomass are poised to play a major role in supporting these emerging technologies.

Missing the Forest for the Trees

Despite all this, woody biomass, like all energy, eventually finds itself in the crosshairs. Critics claim it’s just “burning trees,” a false narrative that ignores both the science and the forests. Sustainable biomass doesn’t chop down protected, old-growth forests. It’s sourced from working forests, the type that are deliberately selected and sustainably managed to produce our dimensional lumber and furniture. Except biomass utilizes the lowest-value fiber that comes off these tracts.

As America’s pulp and paper industry has declined, shuttering dozens of mills and shedding thousands of jobs over the last decade, wood pellets have offered a new market for low-value wood. This fiber has little economic value and without a buyer will often rot, burn, or get landfilled. Using this wood isn’t deforestation, it’s responsible forest stewardship. In fact, without reliable markets like biomass, private landowners will sell and convert their forests for more lucrative returns like agriculture, golf courses, and residential developments.

Investing in Rural America

The benefits of the wood pellet industry go beyond carbon math. This is a sector that brings real jobs to rural America. It supports forest owners, loggers, truckers, and working forests. This is climate action with a hard hat, not a hashtag.

If we’re going to win the climate war, we have to include the states in America’s wood basket where trees grow, people work the land, and decarbonization isn’t an abstract ideal.

Wood pellets are real, scalable, renewable and a true American resource.

In a world increasingly distracted by hype, maybe it’s time we doubled down on solutions that deliver quietly, reliably, and sustainably. One of the smartest is hiding in plain sight — in our forests.

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/wood-pellets-americas-underrated-power-play

'ECB Has Won Battle Against Inflation in the Eurozone, Villeroy Says'

 The European Central Bank has succeeded in bringing inflation under control after a surge driven by the end of the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the head of France's central bank said Friday.

The ECB Thursday lowered its key interest rate to 2% from 2.25%, its eighth cut since June 2024. That move followed figures that showed the annual rate of inflation was 1.9% in May, below the ECB's 2% target.

The central bank's economists expect inflation to average just 1.6% next year, before rising back to 2% in 2027.

"We have won the battle against inflation in Europe," Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said in a television interview.

Eurozone prices rose sharply after the invasion of Ukraine sent energy and food prices soaring, and inflation hit a high of 10.6% in October 2022. The ECB responded by raising borrowing costs from July 2022, taking its key rate from a negative half a percentage point to a peak of 4% in September 2023.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, ECB President Christine Lagarde was more hesitant about declaring victory.

"Victory laps are always nice, but there is always another battle," she said.

Some economists worry that the next battle might be to stop inflation falling well below the 2% target, a return to the challenge the ECB faced in the decade leading up to the Covid-19 pandemic. That could again be a problem if Europe faced a long trade conflict with the U.S. that delivered a severe blow to growth.

Villeroy, who is a member of the ECB's governing council, said he does not view a long period of falling prices as a threat.

"I don't believe in the opposite disease of deflation," he said. "I don't think it's a threat today. If there were ever a risk, we would have the means to act against this threat of deflation. We have done so successfully in the past."

The ECB signaled Thursday that it is close to the end of its sequence of rate cuts unless the eurozone economy suffers a bigger blow from tariffs than its economists anticipate.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/currency/EURO-US-DOLLAR-EUR-USD-4591/news/ECB-Has-Won-Battle-Against-Inflation-in-the-Eurozone-Villeroy-Says-Update-50176786/

Conservative Colombian Presidential Candidate Uribe Shot In The Head In Bogota Event

 Conservative Colombian senator Miguel Uribe Turbay was shot in the head on Saturday in an apparent assassination attempt. There was no immediate confirmation from the authorities on the status of his condition.

The 39-year-old senator is a member of the opposition conservative Democratic Center party, founded by former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe. The two men are not related.

 

The party described the attack as serious, but did not disclose further details on his health.

Unconfirmed video showed the capture of the alleged assassin.

Colombia's presidency issued a statement saying the government "categorically and forcefully" rejected the violent attack, and called for a thorough investigation into the events that took place.

Uribe's mother, the journalist Diana Turbay, was killed in 1991 during a rescue operation after she was kidnapped by Pablo Escobar's Medellin cartel.

 https://www.zerohedge.com/political/conservative-colombian-presidential-candidate-uribe-shot-head-bogota-event

Menopause drug might prevent breast cancer too

 A drug intended to treat menopause symptoms could double as breast cancer prevention.

New research from Northwestern University in Illinois found that Duavee, a Pfizer-made drug, “significantly reduced” breast tissue cell growth, which is a major indicator of cancer progression.

A phase 2 clinical trial included 141 post-menopausal women who had been diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), also known as stage 0 breast cancer, according to a press release from Northwestern.

This non-invasive breast cancer affects more than 60,000 American women each year, often leading to an outcome of invasive breast cancer.

The women were separated into two groups — one received Duavee and the other took a placebo for a month before undergoing breast surgery.

Duavee is a conjugated estrogen/bazedoxifene (CE/BZA) drug, which combines estrogen with another medication that minimizes the potential harmful side effects of the hormone.

“The key takeaway from the study is that CE/BZA slows the growth (proliferation) of cells in milk ducts of DCIS that expressed the estrogen receptor significantly more than placebo,” Dr. Swati Kulkarni, lead investigator and professor of breast surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, told Fox News Digital.

New research from Northwestern University found that the drug Duavee “significantly reduced” breast tissue cell growth, a major indicator of cancer progression.Marko Geber – stock.adobe.com

Another major finding is that the quality of life did not differ significantly between the two groups, but patients who took the CE/BZA reported fewer hot flashes during the study, she noted.

“This would be expected, as the drug is FDA-approved to treat hot flashes.”

Kulkarni presented the study last week at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting in Chicago. 

The women in the study were separated into two groups — one received Duavee and the other took a placebo for a month before undergoing breast surgery.Gorodenkoff – stock.adobe.com
Those who took the drug reported fewer hot flashes during the study.fizkes – stock.adobe.com

The findings are preliminary and have not yet been published in a medical journal.

“What excites me most is that a medication designed to help women feel better during menopause may also reduce their risk of invasive breast cancer,” said the doctor, who is also a Northwestern Medicine breast surgeon.

Women who face a higher risk of breast cancer — including those who have experienced “high-risk lesions” — and who also have menopausal symptoms are most likely to benefit from the drug, according to Kulkarni. 

“These women are typically advised against standard hormone therapies, leaving them with few menopausal treatment options,” the release stated. 

Study limitations

The researchers said they are “encouraged” by these early results, but more research is required before the medication can be considered for approval as a breast cancer prevention mechanism.

“Our findings suggest that CE/BZA may prevent breast cancer, but larger studies with several years of follow-up are needed before we would know this for sure,” Kulkarni told Fox News Digital.

Dr. Sheheryar Kabraji, chief of breast medicine at the Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo, New York, was not involved in the study but commented on the findings.

“What excites me most is that a medication designed to help women feel better during menopause may also reduce their risk of invasive breast cancer,” Dr. Swati Kulkarni said.sarayutsridee – stock.adobe.com

“While intriguing, this study is highly preliminary, and more research will be needed before we can conclude that conjugated estrogen/bazedoxifene (CD/BZA), a form of the hormone estrogen commonly prescribed to address symptoms of menopause, prevents invasive breast cancer or is effective at reducing cancer risk,” he told Fox News Digital.

Kabraji also noted that the study focused on reducing levels of one specific protein, “which does not always predict reduced recurrence of breast cancer.” 

“This study did not directly show that CE/BZA treatment reduces the risk of DCIS recurrence or development of invasive cancer,” he noted. 

According to Kulkarni,”larger studies with several years of follow-up are needed” to confirm that the drug prevents breast cancer.Science RF – stock.adobe.com

“Importantly, however, patients who received this therapy experienced no worsening of quality of life, and saw improvement in vasomotor symptoms, such as hot flashes. If found to be effective in preventing breast cancer, CE/BZA is likely to have fewer side effects than current medications used for breast cancer prevention.”

Lead researcher Kulkarni emphasized that this medication is not for the treatment of invasive breast cancer or DCIS.

“Right now, we can say that women who are concerned about their risk of developing breast cancer can consider this medication to treat their menopausal symptoms,” she added.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/07/health/menopause-medication-might-prevent-breast-cancer-and-treat-hot-flashes/

Feds mobilize the National Guard as riots over immigration raids wreak havoc on LA

 Protests over federal immigration raids continued to wreak havoc on Los Angeles Saturday with agents wearing riot gear reportedly using flash-bang grenades to clear crowds — as the federal government moves to mobilize the National Guard after claiming LAPD took two hours to respond.

“We’re going to bring the National Guard in tonight. We’re going to continue doing out job. We’re going to push back on these people and we’re going to enforce the law,” Tom Homan, Acting Director of US Immigration and Custom Enforcement, said on Fox News, Saturday.

A protester places debris in a fire as Border Patrol personnel in riot gear and gas masks stand guard outside an industrial park in the Paramount section of Los Angeles, on Saturday.AP

Images and video showed a chaotic scene on Saturday as hundreds of protestors filled the streets and clashed with federal agents in riot gear attempting to impede apprehensions by Border Patrol in Paramount, California, near a Home Depot.

The dystopian scene showed the heavily armored agents firing teargas cannisters in order to disperse demonstrators who raged for hours on Saturday in a messy and tumultuous street takeover.

One violent protestor in a face-covering helmet hurled rocks at the windows of cars right outside the super store — cracking some Border Patrol pick-up trucks in the windshield, according to viral video.

A protestor appears to kick a teargas cannister across the Paramount, California street back at a federal agents, on Saturday.ALLISON DINNER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Video circulating online showed an American flag on a fire in the middle of the street across from the home improvement store which was mired by demonstrators, Saturday.

Other protestors during the day stood in front of a federal bus to stop in from carrying off alleged illegal immigrants, video on social media showed.

Violent protests began on Friday with federal agents have raided multiple workplaces in LA’s fashion district and other locations, with the conflagrations continuing at the Paramount Home Depot Saturday, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California.

Border Patrol agents were armed in riot gear as they were met with intense and violent resistance from LA County locals.ALLISON DINNER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

The Trump Administration ripped lefty Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass after a violent mob swarmed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers conducting immigration raids in the city — while the Department of Homeland Security claimed Saturday local cops waited two hours to help push back the agitators.

Lefty pols like Bass are “villainiz[ing] and demoniz[ing ] ICE law enforcement,” leading to the violence that saw roughly 1,000 agitators attack law enforcement officers, deface buildings, slash tires and committing other crimes, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said.

ICE agents who’ve been rounding illegal immigrants in Los Angeles have become the subject of vile graffiti in the city’s downtown.DHS.Gov

“The violent targeting of law enforcement in Los Angeles by lawless rioters is despicable, and Mayor Bass and [California] Governor [Gavin] Newsom must call for it to end,” she added in a statement Saturday.

“The men and women of ICE put their lives on the line to protect and defend the lives of American citizens.”

There’s been a 413% increase in assaults on ICE agents since President Trump took office in January, compared to the same period last year, McLaughlin said.

Roughly 1,000 rioters on Friday surrounded a federal law enforcement building in Los Angeles and assaulted ICE officers, slashed tires and defaced buildings, the feds said.DHS.Gov

Images released by DHS Saturday show parts of downtown Los Angeles covered in vulgar graffiti, including “F–K ICE” and “KILL ICE” spray-painted on fences and buildings — as well as a flyer handed out by the Communist group RefuseFacism.org saying “The Trump Fascist Regime MUST GO NOW!!!”

Helmeted LAPD cops in riot gear faced off Friday evening with protestors after a day of federal immigration raids in the city. At least 44 people were arrested.

The Los Angeles Police Department did not return messages.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called rioters “despicable” in a statement Saturday.Getty Images
Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin blamed Bass and California Governor Gavin Newsom.AP

New York Mayoral candidate and former-governor Andrew Cuomo weighed in on the ICE raids and the protests in both Los Angeles and New York on Saturday.

“The recent ICE crackdowns in Los Angeles and New York City are a deeply troubling escalation in immigration enforcement tactics that undermine community trust and the principles of due process,” Cuomo said in a statement.

“I believe in upholding the rule of law and maintaining secure borders, but these operations — marked by military-style raids, the use of flash-bang grenades, and the detention of individuals, including those attempting to document the events — cross a line into cruelty and unnecessary fear mongering,” Cuomo said in the statement.

Hundreds of migrants, including children, were detained by ICE agents Friday, the ACLU said.

The DHS, however, said operations in LA this week have resulted in the arrest of 118 illegal migrants – including five gang members and others with past criminal charges that include drug trafficking, assault, cruelty to children and robbery, according to the DHS.

Bass condemned the ICE raids in a statement, saying these “tactics sow terror in our communities and disrupt basic principles of safety in our city… We will not stand for this.”

Neither the Department of Homeland Security nor the California National Guard responded to The Post’s request for comment.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/07/us-news/dhs-claims-lapd-waited-2-hours-to-respond-to-protests-over-immigration-raids/