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Pellet Consumption In Denmark Projected To Grow

By Erin Voegele | November 11, 2013 The Dutch government has filed a report on its domestic market for wood pellets with the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service’s Global Agricultural Information Network. According to the report, Denmark is the largest importer of wood pellets in the world, with imports expected to increase from 2 million metric tons in 2012 to 3 million metric tons in 2020. The GAIN report specifies that wood pellets are used in Denmark to fuel small residential boilers, medium-sized district heating plants, and large combined-heat-and-power (CHP) plants, with CHP plants representing the primary driver of growth since 2010. While some pellets are produced domestically in Denmark, most are imported. The report estimates that Danish production of wood pellets has averaged between 130,000 metric tons and 200,000 metric tons annually since 2000, primarily from residue feedstock sourced from the furniture and wood processing industries. Rapidly growing use by CHP plants coupled with a limited domestic feedstock supply has caused significant growth in pellet imports in recent years. In 2012, the country imported 2 million metric tons of wood pellets, valued at $350 million. During the first seven months of 2013, the Dutch government has reported a 10 percent increase in pellet imports. Denmark currently imports most of its pellets from the Baltic Region, with 960,000 metric tons imported from the Baltics in 2012. The country also imported 348,000 metric tons from Russia last year. The GAIN report notes that imports from the U.S. are currently marginal, equating to only 38,000 metric tons in 2012. Moving forward, the report said that sustainability will be a key factor in determining which exporting countries benefit from growing demand. The Danish government is currently analyzing the sustainability of biomass supplies. The results of that study are expected to be ready at the end of the year. The analysis is expected to form the basis for future policy and funding initiatives. Bu 2020. Denmark is expected to consume 3.17 million metric tons of pellets, with 600,000 tons of that volume consumed by residential customers and 2.57 million metric tons by the private sector. Domestic production is expected to hold steady at 150,000 metric tons, with imports reaching 3.1 million metric tons. Approximately 80,000 metric tons of wood pellets will be exported. Continue reading

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Bulgaria’s Farmland Sale Ban Contested At Constitutional Court

By our dpa-correspondent and  Europe Online    auf Facebook posten  Auf Twitter posten   Sofia (dpa) – Bulgaria‘s Constitutional Court is to rule on a controversial, newly extended ban on the sale of farmland to foreigners, Bulgarian lawmaker Chetin Kazak said on Friday. Bulgaria‘s parliament on October 23 extended an existing ban on the sale of farmland to foreign citizens to 2020. According to legal experts and politicians of the ruling coalition of the Socialist Party and the Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF) of the Turkish minority, the move was in breach of the country‘s 2007 accession treaty with the European Union. “We hope the Constitutional Court will rule as quickly as possible because Bulgaria‘s European future is at stake,” Chetin Kazak said. The claim, submitted on Friday, was signed by 55 members of parliament, both of the Socialist Party and of the MRF. The extension of the farmland sale ban, that had been due to expire on December 31, had been proposed by the nationalist Ataka party. Ataka chief Volen Siderov explained his party‘s motion by noting the low prices of farmland in the poorest EU member state. Continue reading

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Romania To Slap Curbs On Buying Farmland

The government is to restrict the ownership of farmland by any single individual to 100 hectares – in what is seen as a measure to restrict purchases by foreign buyers. Marian Chiriac Bucharest The Romanian Agriculture Minister is to send parliament a draft law which would limit individual ownership of farmland to 100 hectares, as a way to protect agriculture. “The law will apply to all persons looking to buy farmland, regardless of their nationality. Those who want to farms larger than 100 hectares can do this only through locally registered companies,” Minister Daniel Constantin said. The law will not be applied retroactively, Constantin added. Farmaland for sale must be bought only by people who must prove they have farming know-how and experience of at least five years in the field. Those who already own farmland and want to buy more land must prove that they have used the land they own already for farming activities. Analysts say the law is aimed mainly at stopping foreigners from buying land in the country after December 31, 2013, when Romania is supposed to open up its market, as agreed in the EU accession treaty. Foreign ownership of land has become a hot issue in Romania. In recent months, the government expressed fears that foreign buyers could take advantage of low land prices and eventually control Romanian agriculture. The amount of farmland in Romania owned by foreigners has increased by more than 10 per cent in the last year alone, prompting the authorities to consider curbs. According to official data, foreigners now own over 710,000 hectares of farmland, which is around 8.5 per cent of the country’s total farmland. Of this amount, around a quarter belongs to Italian citizens, 15 per cent to Germans, and around 10 per cent to buyers from the Middle East. By law, only foreign companies can buy land in Romania – but that restriction has to be lifted by 2014, and the European Commission has called for it to be lifted even earlier. Ironically, agricultural land is not seen as an asset by most Romanians, who tend to consider agriculture a thing of the past. As many as 1.3 million hectares of arable land lie unused in Romania, according to statistics. The total agricultural surface in Romania is 14.7 million hectares, of which 9.3 million hectares are arable. Almost half of Romania’s 19.5 million people still live in rural areas. But agriculture has long lacked investment, while other problems include fragmentation of holdings, property-related lawsuits and obsolete technology. Continue reading

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