- Biomass
- Biomass Energy Case Studies
- Associated Harvest
- CCE Delaware County
- CCE Dutchess County
- CCE St. Lawrence County
- Catalyst Renewables
- Central New York Resource Conservation & Development Project, Inc.
- Dedrick Farms
- Eco-Grid
- Edwards-Knox Central School
- Enviro Energy, LLC
- Instantheat Wood Pellets, Inc.
- Lower Hudson-Long Island Resource Conservation & Development Project, Inc.
- NY Farm Viability Institute
- Schuyler Wood Pellet
- State University of New York - College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY-ESF)
- Vernon-Verona-Sherrill Central School District
- Wood Heat
- Biomass Energy Case Studies
- Solar Energy
Central New York Resource Conservation & Development Project, Inc.
CNY RC&D (http://www.cnyrcd.org/former%20projects.htm) formerly hosted a project called the Willow Biomass Project. The project was funded through the US Department of Energy's Biomass Power for Rural Development Program. CNY RC&D worked with the "Salix Consortium", which includes companies and organizations such as Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation, State University of New York - College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY ESF), NYS Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), Cornell University's Departments of Biological and Agricultural Engineering and Ornithology, and Antares Group, Inc. The goal of the project was to "commercialize willow bioenergy crops as locally grown, renewable feedstock for bioproducts and bioenergy."
In 1998, the Salix Consortium planted 90 acres of willow on private land leased in Chautauqua and Cattaraugus Counties. In Spring, 1999, 200 more acres were planted. In the spring of 2000, 175 acres were planted on leased land, and 25 acres were planted by the project's first contracted farmer-grower. Research into the benefits of willow plantings to wildlife were conducted by SUNY ESF, which studied the biodiversity of soil microarthropods, and Cornell's Ornithology department, which studied bird nesting and migrational use of willow fields.
According to Phil Metzger of the USDA's Natural Resource Conservation Service (p: 607-334-4715 x4, e:phil.metzger@ny.usda.gov), the goal of this project was to get farmers involved and get them to demonstrate that willow could be grown and harvested successfully in the region. The willow was not sold for commercial use at the time. Metzger says there were no "green energy" incentives at the time, and that the market was the prime determinant of whether or not willow could be a viable biomass crop. There was no competitive market for it at the time of the study, and coal and natural gas prices were low. It might be more successful now, he conjectures, as there is more of a movement toward greener energy sources.
CNY RC&D's role was to get local farmers involved and see who would grow the willow, as well as educational outreach. The willow was never intended for residential or small commercial use. Rather, it was harvested and chipped, and then burned by a power plant in Western NY. The idea was to show the power plant that if they needed renewable fuels they could use willow. There was no plan for the material's use in wood stoves, but there was a lot of talk regarding other ways to harvest the willow, if it had caught on commercially.

