Bioenergy is energy generated from different types of biological processes. Ontario has plentiful sources of bioenergy, including residual materials from forestry operations that are left to decay on the forest floor, waste matter from agricultural production and animal livestock activities, and by-products of food-processing operations. In addition, the potential energy of these materials is lost as methane gas is slowly released into the environment.
Technologies now exist to use this energy to contribute to Ontario's energy targets - without interfering with commercial production processes and in a manner that often provides net environmental benefits - while reducing our dependence on non-renewable fuels.
Biomass
One major example of bioenergy is biomass. Biomass is a renewable source of energy that uses organic materials to produce heat. Wood by-products, plants, crops and animal waste are used instead of fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas. Burning this organic waste generates the heat and steam that are needed to spin electricity-producing turbines. Cow manure, for example, is a source of biomass energy since animal waste gives off methane gas.
Biomass can be processed or burned in the following ways:
Many different types of electricity-generating facilities use biomass as their renewable energy fuel.
The following interactive tool helps explain biomass energy. Click here to use the tool.
