So lets do the numbers on the distortion caused by the 'working of the system in Europe.
Drax expects  to burn about seven million tons of wood annually and collect about $600  million a year from renewable-energy credits.
 So they are getting $600m back (from tax payers) because they are burning wood that would be illegal to burn if sourced in most of Europe but as it is coming from the US (with much weaker environmental protection) which allows clear felling of old growth forests it is OK.  The cost of 7 million tons of thermal coal (using year avg prices) was $430m.
  All of a sudden it makes it easy to see where the funding for pushing these Green Initiatives may be coming from!  And curiously enough the provable science does not support this so-called Green Initiative - what a surprise!
  So by burning trees that took 30, 40 or over 100 years to sequester their carbon and releasing it in a few minutes is OK.  Unless an area 30-100 times the size is replanted for each area cut down then it is increasing carbon emissions.
 BUT fresh water is also a valuable commodity, as is arable land that is needed for food production - so the model does not work.  Isn't this hypocritical then to criticise the developing economies for doing the same thing?  Such as in Malaysia, Indonesia, Brazil and Argentina?  Yes, the UK carbon tax is working well.
[h=1]Europe's Green-Fuel Search Turns to America's Forests[/h]INDSOR, N.C.—Loggers here are clear-cutting a wetland forest with decades-old trees.                                                                                                                                                                                                              
               
                            
                                The U.S. logging industry is seeing a rejuvenation,  thanks in part of Europe's efforts to seek out green fuel and move away  from coal. Ianthe Dugan explains. Photo: Getty Images.                                
                     
         
      
     
                                 Behind the move: an environmental push.
 The  push isn't in North Carolina but in Europe, where governments are  trying to reduce fossil-fuel use and carbon-dioxide emissions. Under  pressure, some of the Continent's coal-burning power plants are  switching to wood. 
 But Europe doesn't  have enough forests to chop for fuel, and in those it does have, many  restrictions apply. 
So Europe's power plants are devouring wood from the  U.S., where forests are bigger and restrictions fewer. 
 This  dynamic is bringing jobs to some American communities hard hit by mill  closures. It is also upsetting conservationists, who say cutting forests  for power is hardly an environmental plus. 
 On  a hot Tuesday along North Carolina's Roanoke River, crews were cutting  the trees in a swampy 81-acre parcel, including towering tupelos. While  many of the trunks went for lumber, the limbs and the smaller trees were  loaded on trucks headed to a mill 30 miles away, to be ground up,  compressed into pellets and put on ships to Europe. 
 "The  logging industry around here was dead a few years ago," said                                                                        Paul Burby,                                                                owner of a firm called Carolina East Forest Products that hired  subcontractors to cut the trees after paying a landowner for rights.  "Now that Europe is using all these pellets, we can barely keep up."
                                                                                                                                         
                              
                                                          
        
     
   
                                                            The logging is perfectly legal in  North Carolina and generally so elsewhere in the U.S. South. In much of  Europe, it wouldn't be. 
 The U.K., for  example, requires loggers to get permits for any large-scale  tree-cutting. They must leave buffers of standing trees along wetlands,  and they generally can't clear-cut wetlands unless the purpose is to  restore habitat that was altered by tree planting, said a spokesman for  the U.K. Forestry Commission. 
 Italy and  Lithuania make some areas off-limits for clear-cutting, meaning cutting  all of the trees in an area rather than selectively taking the mature  ones. Switzerland and Slovenia completely prohibit clear-cutting. 
It is a  common logging practice in the U.S. 
 U.S. wood thus allows EU countries to skirt Europe's environmental rules on logging but meet its environmental rules on energy.
 The  wood-power industry says its approach is environmentally sound. "We  only take the low-value material from the forest," said                                                                        Nigel Burdett,                                                                the environment chief for Drax PLC, a U.K. power company that is  converting some coal units at the U.K.'s biggest power plant to wood and  setting up pellet mills in the U.S. 
 The  industry also cites the ability of trees newly planted after cutting to  absorb greenhouse gases. "Young trees absorb more carbon than older  trees," said                                                                        John Keppler,                                                                chief executive of the U.S.'s biggest wood-pellet exporter,  Enviva LP, at a London conference on "biomass" power in April. "What's  the best way to get more carbon absorbed? Cut it down. Replant."
 
Environmental  groups dispute that logic. They say all the carbon that mature trees  have been "sequestering" is instantly released when they are burned, far  more rapidly than saplings can absorb it. 
 If  Europe's goal is to reduce carbon emissions, "it doesn't make any sense  to cut down the trees that are sequestering carbon," said                                                                        Debbie Hammel,                                                                a resource specialist at the Natural Resources Defense Council.
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                            Parts of some trees cut in the U.S. become fuel for Europe's power producers, processed into wood pellets.                Matt Eich for The Wall Street Journal              
        
     
   
                                                            The European Union's environment  agency said it is trying to assess the consequences of creating a U.S.  pellet boom. "The European Commission is currently analyzing the  environmental risks" of large-scale biomass production, said a  spokeswoman for the office of the energy commissioner at the Commission,  which is the EU's executive body. 
 The  Commission, she said by email, is trying to determine "whether such  risks can be effectively managed through existing forest/environmental  policies." 
 
The push began in 2007, when  the Commission set a goal, by 2020, of reducing Europe's greenhouse-gas  emissions to 20% below their 1990 level. It also set a goal of moving  Europe to 20% renewable energy by 2020. 
 Solar  and wind couldn't meet the latter goal, policy makers recognized. They  said wood qualified as a renewable energy source as long as it came from  forests that would grow back. Emissions from burning wood contain less  of certain chemicals, such as sulfur, than coal smoke. 
 European  countries devised a system of awarding credits to companies that  generate electricity from renewable sources. They then can sell their  credits to electricity suppliers. 
 Drax  has long burned coal in a plant rising from pastoral Yorkshire fields.  This has become an increasingly unattractive practice, for a variety of  reasons that include a carbon tax floor the U.K. made effective this  year. Drax has set out to convert half its coal units to wood.
 The  plant has converted one of its six units so far, and last year it sold  about $90 million of renewable-energy credits to other companies, a  spokeswoman said. After it fully converts two more units, 
Drax expects  to burn about seven million tons of wood annually and collect about $600  million a year from renewable-energy credits.
 On  a recent day, workers were finishing two giant concrete domes to store  pellets, which arrive from ports on Drax's own rail line. "The vast  majority" come from the U.S., Drax said.
                                                                                                        		
“   		    'The logging industry around here was dead,' said one logger. Now, with Europe's demand, 'we can barely keep up.'   		    ”   		  
                             Reasons for favoring the U.S.,  besides its ample forests close to ports, include political pressure in  Europe against buying in countries where there would be a risk of  getting illegally harvested tropical hardwoods. 
 Europe's  nine largest wood-burning utilities consumed 6.7 million tons of wood  pellets in 2012, according to Argus Media, which tracks the industry.  Argus expects European pellet consumption to nearly double by 2020, with  much of the new demand met from the U.S. American mills exported 1.9  million tons of pellets last year, up nearly fourfold in three years, by  Argus's figures. 
 
U.S. exports of coal  to Europe have also risen, owing partly to price fluctuations in natural  gas. Energy analysts call the trend temporary since some coal plants  are set to close in coming years.
 The pellet economy appears to be developing faster than rules to guide it.
 Principles  the EU has told member countries to follow say wood for energy can't  come from forests that aren't reforested after cutting. Also, trees from  sensitive areas like wetlands, old-growth forests or areas of wide  biodiversity aren't supposed to be burned for power. Doing so would  violate sustainability criteria the European Commission has outlined,  said the spokeswoman for the commission's office of the energy  commissioner. 
 Those criteria were set  for biofuels such as alcohol distilled from wood. The EU has told member  countries to use the same guidelines in forming their policies on wood  as fuel, though this currently isn't binding on them. The EU is  currently studying wood-specific rules. Individual countries will be  responsible for interpreting and enforcing them, said people involved in  the policy process. 
 In the U.K., it  still isn't clear exactly what restrictions there ultimately will be on  wood from wetlands trees, said the U.K. Department of Conservation and  Climate Change. The U.K.'s draft rules indicate it might be permissible  to use some such wood if it were determined that logging it didn't  permanently change a wetland's ecosystem, a spokeswoman said. European  authorities can't mandate what forests in other countries are harvested,  only tell European companies what kind of wood fuel will qualify for  renewable credits. 
 With the rules so  unsettled, ensuring the forestry is sustainable has been left largely to  power companies and pellet suppliers. 
 Drax  said it carefully monitors its supply chain. "We are not taking  old-growth forest," said the company's Mr. Burdett. Drax said it  requires pellet suppliers to exclude wood from areas that would be  permanently deforested or have their ecosystems destroyed. 
 Many  of the pellet-making plants springing up in the U.S.—which include  plants planned by Drax and other European power companies—are near pine  plantations established long ago partly to serve the now-slumping  wood-pulp market. 
 
Enviva charted a  different course. The company, backed by New York private-equity firm  Riverstone Holdings, put some of its pellet plants near natural hardwood  forests that had established loggers and access to ports, but depressed  tree-cutting activity because of pulp-mill closures. Enviva, a supplier  to Drax, recently opened one of its largest plants so far in  Northhampton County, N.C., in the coastal hardwood belt.
 Mr.  Burby, the logger who bought rights to cut trees along the Roanoke  River near Windsor, said that in the past, he would "shovel-log" the  swamps—clear-cut them with bulldozer-like vehicles riding on makeshift  roads made of trees. He sold the large trunks to lumber mills and  smaller stuff to pulp mills.
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                            Some of the logging that feeds European demand is done in swamps like in Windsor, N.C.                Matt Eich for The Wall Street Journal              
        
     
   
                                                            In 2009, a paper-company pulp mill he  sold to closed. His business fell off steeply, partly because "you  couldn't get rid of the hardwood pulpwood." Landowners didn't want big  mounds of limbs piling up, and without a market for the pulpwood, it was  hard to make a profit.
 Now, Enviva's  pellet mill in Ahoskie, N.C., has created a new market for pulp-grade  wood. Standing on a section of higher ground near the Roanoke, Mr. Burby  said the pellet mill made it possible for him to keep his crew working  there, cutting the pine, oak, beech and sycamore in the drier sections  and the tupelo gum and cypress hardwoods that grow tall in the flooded  areas.
 "With Enviva opening up, you can justify shovel-logging again," Mr. Burby said. 
 The  North Carolina Forest Service allows logging in wetlands as long as it  complies with state laws prohibiting destruction of waterways, said a  spokesman,                                                                        Brian Haines.                                                                Among voluntary "best management" practices, the agency urges  loggers in its published guidelines to "minimize activity on saturated  soils and near waterbodies." In wet areas, the state recommends building  roads out of trees as Mr. Burby did, to help keep heavy machines from  damaging the wetland.
 Enviva said it  requires timber suppliers to follow state-recommended best-management  practices and sometimes audits logging operations. Customers sometimes  inspect Enviva's operations, its spokeswoman said, so it has an  incentive to be careful where its wood comes from. 
 
Still,  wood from forests with trees more than 100 years old, including some  from wetlands, does wind up in pellet plants, according to loggers. In  recent months, foresters have clear-cut portions of two such Roanoke  River areas and delivered some of the wood to Enviva's mill in Ahoskie,  the loggers said.
 Logger                                                                        George Henerson                                                                said that earlier this year, he sold Enviva several hundred tons  of hardwood that his crew clear-cut from a swamp that hadn't been logged  for about 100 years.
 "Enviva, now they need wood bad enough that they're paying for some swamp logging," said Mr. Henerson. 
 Academics  who study wetland forests say some of those along the Roanoke are  sensitive environments that it may not be possible to clear-cut  sustainably.                                                                        William Conner,                                                                a forestry professor at Clemson University, said recent research  shows that wetland trees in the Roanoke area regrow slowly after  clear-cutting and without the same species mix. 
                                                                          Stanley Riggs,                                                                a geologist at East Carolina University, said that besides the  animal and plant habitat that mature wetland forests provide, they help  prevent flooding. He said clear-cutting them is "destroying a whole  ecosystem." A North Carolina group called the Dogwood Alliance, along  with the Natural Resources Defense Council, is launching a campaign  against pellet mills.
 Enviva's  spokeswoman said the swamps along the Roanoke were logged sustainably,  because the loggers took measures to prevent damaging the ground, such  as keeping their bulldozers on a temporary road, and the landowners will  let the trees naturally regrow.