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Resources > A Timber Town Finds a Future in New Crop

April 22, 2008
A Timber Town Finds a Future in New Crop
Grays Harbor's new biofuels plant

By Jay Inslee and Bracken Hendricks
Special to the Apollo News Service

Fourth in a series

A clean-energy revolution promises not just to renew big cities; clean energy is having a big impact on small-town America as well. Grays Harbor, a port hamlet near Aberdeen and Hoquiam on the coast of Washington State, was dying twenty years ago. Built on the abundant riches of the massive timber on the Olympic Peninsula, it enjoyed a century of harvesting, sawing, processing, and shipping lumber all over the world.

For six generations of families, choker setters had gone into the woods, green chain pullers had gone into the mills, and small business owners had cashed their paychecks. It was a happy community of 41,000 souls living in the yearly hundred inches of rain that watered the forest canopy on which they depended.

Then a small, feathered bomb hit the town, in the form of the spotted owl. Rulings by the federal courts designed to protect the endangered creature contributed to the flight of timber companies as they abandoned the forests that were its critical habitats. Radically reduced timber harvests at the same time that the market was opening to global competition for raw logs and milled forest products were devastating. In a matter of years, the timber supply dried up, the mill workers were laid off, and the longshoremen who loaded ships bound across the world sat waiting for the call to join a dockside crew. The call never came.

These are proud and hardworking people: the Swedes of Hoquiam, the Scots of Aberdeen, and the Slavic community in Cosmopolis. They had built a place where work and family were enough. The town had a rough optimism and brawling temper not far removed from the timber camps. Labor was king and work was hard, but the trees would always be there. When the economic heart was ripped from this one-industry community, the visible disintegration of small businesses being shuttered and mills rusting away was bad enough. Far worse was the invisible pain of families whose breadwinner sat idle.

Because Grays Harbor is literally at the end of the road, well away from other employment centers, folks had nowhere to turn. The few tourists who missed the road to the best clam-digging beaches farther south were not much help.

Conventional Did Not Work; Unconventional Did
Like many communities suffering from economic dislocation, Grays Harbor began to cast about for ways to bring back the jobs that had been so productive for generations. They tried the conventional routes, attempting to lure light manufacturing and call centers to the area, to little effect. They even tried a plan to make Grays Harbor a historic seaport, filled with sailing ships, museums, and tourists with disposable dollars. It fit the area’s sailing tradition and excited the community, but the tourists never came.

Then, serendipitously, the town discovered another renewable resource: biofuels. More accurately, biodiesel discovered Grays Harbor.

It began one day in 2005 when Gary Nelson, director of the Grays Harbor Port District, got a call from John Plaza, founder and president of a company called Imperium Renewables, which makes biodiesel. Plaza had carefully researched potential locations for a huge expansion of his refinery operations and needed a spot with both rail and seaborne access.

Plaza, a former airline pilot and backed by financier Paul Allen, had a vision for a plant that could use feed stocks from Midwestern soybeans and oil crops around the world while the market for local crops like mustard seed from nearby farmers developed. The demands of the emerging biodiesel market warranted building a plant that could ride out shortages and price spikes in any oil market, and port transportation was key.

Green For Union Workers Too
The courtship between the community and the company was brief but exciting. Financing was successful, and by November 2006, construction had begun on a 100-million-gallon-per-year plant that has made Grays Harbor the host of the largest biodiesel refinery in North America. With the imposing physical presence of an oil refinery but none of its toxic emissions, the plant opened in August 2007, and boasts 10 huge tanks, eight of which hold 2 million gallons each. .

Some 300 union tradesmen built the $60 million plant. It takes 60 well-paid people to run it, according to the company. Since manufacturing jobs of this quality spin off 7.5 indirect jobs each, the plant has helped to generate hundreds more jobs in Grays Harbor. The Port of Grays Harbor conducted an economic analysis that found 350 indirect jobs are created as a result of the Imperium plant. That figure includes the jobs generated by 24 vessel calls and 10 new Longshoremen Union jobs. Railway workers also deliver hundreds of rail cars a year of Midwestern soy oil, and scores of tug operators will barge biodiesel to Seattle. That’s a lot of jobs in a small town, and the difference between a functioning community and a dot on a map.

In doing all this Imperium values the skills of its workers who came from former jobs in the old local paper industry, people who are used to processes akin to refining biodiesel. The men and women who brewed up pulp for paper now brew biofuels. The company now receives twenty to thirty résumés a week from people drawn by the promise of a local future.

One important new economic development is Imperium's emerging focus on producing biofuel for jet airplanes. In February, Virgin Atlantic, one of the world’s leading long-haul airlines, flew a Boeing 747 jumbo jet on biofuel from London Heathrow to Amsterdam – becoming the first airline in the world to fly on renewable fuel. Together with partners Boeing, GE Aviation and Imperium Renewables, Virgin Atlantic is helping to pioneer renewable fuel sources for aviation.

Port commissioner Gary Nelson says, “These guys have done it right. They have diversified their operations in feed stock and in their market. I’m impressed with them, and when you are as eager as we are for growth, you make sure things are for real before signing up. We aren’t out of the woods yet, because we lost 2,000 jobs in the last five years and we’re still not back to even. But we are real hopeful around here now.” In a town like Grays Harbor, hope is a precious commodity.

Despite the good news, the transformation cost at least one man his job. Any transition causes dislocation, but in this case the victim was a state representative who spoke poorly of the biodiesel plan and was promptly thrown out of office by his angry constituents. Voters do not like a naysayer, particularly one giving short shrift to economic recovery and the potential of clean energy.

John Plaza looks at renewable energy as rising above partisan politics. “Biodiesel is a red-blue uniter,” he says. “It can unite the country and head us in a new direction in energy. I believe it has the capacity to change the world eventually. Sure, we can’t grow our entire supply of fuels using soy-based biodiesel. But we should use what we have, and it’s turning this community around economically.”

In the future, Plaza envisions an even more cutting-edge source of energy: algae, which he believes could produce 650 gallons of biofuel per acre. “When that happens, we can seriously obtain energy independence using just .2 percent of our land mass,” he says. His efforts are both building the necessary infrastructure bridge to higher forms of biofuels and reviving the fortunes of a town hungry for opportunity. “I’m happy with that,” he says. He should be.

Grays Harbor is not a one-trick pony, however, when it comes to green industrial development. The biodiesel plant has attracted three other green industries: Grays Harbor Paper produces 100 percent recycled paper; Sierra Pacific burns “hog fuel,” the sawdust from the mill; and the Pane Trek Company is building green paneling. Furthermore, these companies have discovered cogeneration; Grays Harbor Paper and Sierra Pacific are burning biofuel to produce both heat for their operations and electricity that is fed back into the grid. This doubles the efficiency of their power operations.

Together, Imperium and those green companies now form the core of the future for Grays Harbor’s economy. The sudden concentration of green industry—unimaginable in an area where spotted-owl stew was featured on many restaurant menus in the 1990s—may represent a pattern to be duplicated across small-town America. Green has come to mean jobs—not job destruction—for Grays Harbor.

This article is excerpted from "Apollo's Fire: Igniting America's Clean Energy Economy," by Jay Inslee and Bracken Hendricks. Copyright 2008. Reproduced by permission of Island Press, Washington, D.C. Jay Inslee is a Democratic Congressman from Washington State, and Bracken Hendricks is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, and co-founder and former executive director of the Apollo Alliance.

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For more information

Apollo's Fire: Igniting America's Clean energy Economy

Apollo's Fire

Representative Jay Inslee
Member of Congress
Web Email
Web site

Bracken Hendricks
Senior Fellow
Center for American American Progress
Email
Web site

Imperium Renewables

Seattle Post Intelligencer account

Island Press

The other articles in this series are:

100 MPG

Steelmills to Windmills

Apollo's Fire

April 22, 2008

A Business Labor Alliance on Washington Biofuels Plant
Craft unions bring project in on time and on budget

By Richard Eidlin
Apollo News Service

The Imperium Biofuels plant in Grays Harbor is one of the early results of a partnership between organized labor and the private sector designed to help spur a clean energy economy in Washington state.

John Plaza, president of Imperium Renewables, explained it this way; “Given market demand and federal legislation, we wanted to fast track this project. While we had the necessary capital, we knew that the key to bringing the facility on line expeditiously was securing a highly skilled workforce.”

In choosing JH Kelly, a fourth generation Seattle-based general construction firm, Imperium ensured itself of just that. “Our workforce consists of unionized electricians, pipe fitters, steelworkers, carpenters and ironworkers,” said Mason Evans, the firm's president. “Our company, and the unions in specific, provides better safety and productivity. And anyone concerned about return on investment certainly gets their monies worth by hiring us.”

John Plaza added, “While we didn’t start out seeking union labor, we quickly recognized that JH Kelly’s reputation for having a highly skilled workforce as well as delivering on time and within budget was exactly what we needed.”

JH Kelly broke ground in August 2006 and completed the project in 14 months. Construction entailed extensive pipefitting, electrical wiring , and a number of tanks large enough to store16 million gallons of fuel. Over 250 union members worked the job, representing Pipefitters, Local 26, Millwrights, Local 204, Ironworkers, Local 86, Carpenters, Local 317, Boilermakers, Local 502, Laborers, Local 252, Operators Local 612 and the Cement Finishers, Local 528.

“We knew this would be a huge undertaking, and are glad to see how critical labor was to bringing the project online earlier than we had anticipated,” said Plaza.

Richard Eidlin, based in Denver, is business development director of the Apollo Alliance. Reach him at eidlin@apolloalliance.org

 





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