Enviva Thanks Alabama Department of Environmental Management for Opportunity to Hear from Community Ahead of Proposed Pellet Plant Construction in Sumter County

Project Could Represent Initial Investment of $175 million, Creating Over 250 Jobs

BETHESDA, Md.--()--Enviva, the world’s largest producer of wood pellets, a renewable and sustainable energy source used to generate electricity and heat, issued a statement today thanking the Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) for its efforts to ensure that residents’ and other interested parties’ voices were heard during a hearing at the Livingston Civic Center tonight. The hearing was held in response to Enviva’s request for a permit to construct a wood pellet production plant in Sumter County.

In early October, Enviva joined members of the Sumter and Epes communities for a ceremony where Governor Kay Ivey announced the completion of a state project development agreement with Enviva. Enviva expects the proposed wood pellet production plant in Epes to be the next facility in its strategic asset cluster in the Gulf region, which is expected to include other pellet plants in the states of Mississippi and Alabama and a deep-water marine terminal at the Port of Pascagoula. The proposed plant, which would be located at the Port of Epes Industrial Park, would represent an initial investment of approximately $175 million and would create a minimum of 85 full-time jobs and an estimated 180 additional jobs in logging, transportation, and local services.

Enviva’s Chairman & CEO John Keppler issued the following statement after tonight’s hearing in Sumter County:

We are grateful for the work that ADEM has done on this permit and appreciate the opportunity to hear from residents and other stakeholders tonight in Sumter County as we work together to create jobs and a strong community. We are especially grateful for the overwhelming support we’ve received from the community over the last few months.

Last month, when I had the privilege to join Governor Ivey, Secretary Canfield, Mayors Tartt and Porter, Senator Singleton and Commissioner Campbell, I talked about how Enviva’s proposed facility would not just be a wood pellet plant in their county. We will be more than that. We will be a part of this community. We will be a good corporate citizen and a good neighbor. We intend to hire locally first, as we do with all of our facilities, and expect to be a source for well-paying, long-term jobs in Sumter County. As I mentioned when we were together, every ton the Epes plant will produce over the next several decades has already been sold, so western Alabama can count on Enviva for a long time to come.”

Enviva has an unwavering commitment to sustainability and environmental stewardship. As the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has noted, renewable wood energy is an important part of keeping global temperatures in check, and an incentive for private landowners in Alabama and elsewhere to keep growing more trees. We look forward to working with local landowners who share our belief in keeping forests as forests. We also pledge to uphold the most stringent safety and air quality controls as we do with all our operations.”

The written comment period remains open through Friday, November 15th at 5 p.m.

About the Epes permit:

In consultation with the ADEM, Enviva requested an air construction permit for the proposed Epes plant:

  • The plant’s planned permitted capacity is expected to be 1,150,000 metric tons of wood pellets per year. The plant would initially be constructed to produce 700,000 metric tons per year with the possibility to expand in the future to reach full production capacity of 1,150,000 metric tons of wood pellets per year.
  • Enviva expects to be ready for construction in early 2020, subject to receiving the necessary permits. Based on experience, Enviva expects construction to take anywhere from 15 to 18 months.
  • The sustainably sourced wood pellets from the Epes plant are expected to be transported by barge via the Tennessee-Tombigbee River to Enviva’s planned deep-water marine terminal to be located in Pascagoula, MS, where they would be exported to Europe and Asia.
  • The plant would principally utilize a mix of softwood and mill residuals sourced from areas within approximately 75 miles of the plant. The rich fiber basket and supply in Alabama, along with favorable transport logistics and a great local workforce, are what makes this project sustainable and attractive.

Additional background information on the permits and Enviva’s operations:

  • Enviva conducted due diligence to confirm that the plant’s sourcing area has commercially available low-value wood that meets its strict sustainability requirements in sufficient qualities to supply the plant up to the permitted production level.
  • Enviva’s Responsible Sourcing Policy requires that it only source low-value wood from tracts that will be remain as working forests.

Additional Background on Enviva and Renewable Wood Energy

  • At the multinational level, on August 8, 2019, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (“IPCC”), which continues to drive climate policies around the globe, released a Special Report on Climate Change and Land (the “SRCCL”). This report pointed out that a sustainable future depends on a diverse managed forest products industry that includes sawtimber, pulpwood, and bioenergy. This is a reiteration of IPCC’s long-standing view, as expressed in the October 2018 Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C, that biomass and bioenergy must play a key role under every single pathway to achieve the goal of limiting climate change to 1.5-degrees Celsius. The International Renewable Energy Agency (“IRENA”), in its recently published Global Energy Transformation: A Roadmap to 2050 report (the “IRENA Roadmap”), not only reiterated IPCC’s view on the critical role of biomass, but also called for a tripling of the amount of modern biomass used for energy production from 5 percent today to 16 percent by 2050, as it laid out its own proposed global pathway to a carbon-neutral and renewable future by 2050.
  • Bioenergy is part of an all-in strategy to reduce carbon emissions and limit dependence on fossil fuels. Biomass energy offers a 74-85% lifecycle reduction of greenhouse gas emissions compared with coal. Power generation using biomass also provides a reliable, source of energy that complements the intermittency of wind and solar energy, enabling a stable grid without reliance on fossil-powered backup.
  • American forest inventories are increasing every year. Today, in the U.S. Southeast, private forest owners are growing 40% more wood than they remove every year. Only 2% of the working forests in the Southeastern U.S. are harvested each year, while the remaining 98% are in various stages of regrowth, continuing to grow and store carbon. Working forests thrive when managed sustainably. Enviva plays a crucial role in helping ensure the protection and growth of forests. Enviva does not source from forests that will be converted to another land use.
  • U.S. Forest Service data show that forest inventory is increasing in the sourcing regions for all of Enviva’s plants including those in North Carolina; in fact, there is a clear upward trend during the period since Enviva started operations.
  • The key to keeping forests as forests is strong demand for forest products – including the additional value of being able to sell low-value wood for bioenergy. Additional demand raises the value landowners can get from keeping their land as managed forests. Absent strong demand, landowners have the incentive to convert their land for a higher return. That could mean a farm, a housing development, or a strip mall.
  • Enviva provides landowners with a key market for their low-value wood – including “thinnings,” tops & limbs, and other low-value trees that would otherwise not get used for lumber or other higher value products. Enviva plays a crucial role in helping ensure the protection and growth of forests.
  • Enviva is certified to the stringent standards of the world’s foremost forestry organizations, such as the Sustainable Biomass Program (SBP), Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the Program for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC), and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI). These independent forest certification programs provide a consistent, verifiable, and transparent framework for evaluating the sustainability of a company’s operations, from forest to product. Enviva believes that landowner certification of forestland is a good thing, and so they pay more for fiber from certified forests. Enviva engages in ongoing landowner outreach and education and makes direct investments to support certifications of forestlands. As Enviva continues to work to increase the total percentage of lands certified, they also ensure that non-certified fiber comes from responsible sources.
  • Enviva has also developed “Track & Trace®,” an industry-leading sustainable sourcing program, which provides transparent, publicly available data about Enviva’s sourcing. Track & Trace® works with its supply chain partners to verify and document the origin of all of their wood. As part of this program Enviva pays particular attention to land use change, use and effectiveness of Best Management Practices, wetlands, biodiversity, and certification status.

To learn more about Enviva, please visit our website at www.envivabiomass.com.

About Enviva Holdings, LP

Enviva Holdings, LP is the world’s largest producer of industrial wood pellets, a renewable and sustainable energy source used to generate electricity and heat. Through its subsidiaries, Enviva Holdings, LP owns and operates wood pellet processing plants and deep-water export terminals in the Southeastern United States. We export our pellets primarily to power plants in the United Kingdom and Europe that previously were fueled by coal, enabling them to reduce their lifetime carbon footprint by about 80 percent. We make our pellets using sustainable practices that protect Southern forests and employ about 1,000 people and support many other businesses in the rural South, where jobs and economic opportunity are sometimes scarce. Enviva Holdings, LP conducts its activities primarily through two entities: Enviva Partners, LP, a publicly-traded master limited partnership (NYSE: EVA), and Enviva Development Holdings, LLC, a wholly owned private company. To learn more about Enviva Holdings, LP, please visit our website at www.envivabiomass.com and follow us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/envivabiomass) and Twitter (@EnvivaBiomass).

Cautionary Note Concerning Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements and information in this press release, including those concerning future results of operations, acquisition opportunities, and distributions, may constitute “forward-looking statements.” The words “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “plan,” “intend,” “foresee,” “should,” “would,” “could,” or other similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, which are generally not historical in nature. These forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations and beliefs concerning future developments and their potential effects. Although management believes that these forward-looking statements are reasonable when made, there can be no assurance that future developments will be those that management anticipates. These forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties (some of which are beyond our control) and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from our historical experience and our present expectations or projections.

Contacts

Maria Moreno
media@envivabiomass.com
301-657-5560

Release Summary

Enviva thanks ADEM for opportunity to hear from community ahead of proposed plant construction in Sumter County, Alabama.

Contacts

Maria Moreno
media@envivabiomass.com
301-657-5560