Toby,

 

A company in Texas sells bagged, toasted, wood chunks that they make from 
hardwood round wood. They sell to the outdoor barbeque market which is 
decidedly big in the South and Southeast. 

 

Pallet stock makes great biochar. A pallet recycler in the Midwest developed a 
biochar processing line. As of last year they have changed their use of the 
material which may now be being used as fuel. There are many reasons why 
biochar marketing or production can fail. In spite of the benefits it’s not 
just an easy sell. 

 

Potential as fuel usually depends on transportation to users. 

 

Tom  

 

From: Gasification [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Toby Seiler
Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2016 11:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Gasification] field of wood

 

A sawmill that makes pallets that I service has a field of slats that are waste 
to the pallet making operation.  They have a market for bedding and grind a lot 
of slabs, but these are the near misses or defective slats and runners.  They 
put them on pallets and most are air dried in the field. A lot has accumulated. 

 

So I'm wondering, if I were to make chunks, about 3" long, would there be a 
market? What further processing would make hardwood chunks (no bark) into a 
high value product?  Like toasting them?  Any ideas or customers in the 
midwestUS?  How about breweries? 

 

Toby Seiler

Seiler Technical Co.   

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