Biomass explained

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Biomass—renewable energy from plants and animals

Biomass is renewable organic material that comes from plants and animals. Biomass can be burned directly for heat or converted to liquid and gaseous fuels through various processes.

Biomass was the largest source of total annual U.S. energy consumption until the mid-1800s. In 2023, biomass accounted for about 5% of U.S. total primary energy consumption. Biomass is used for heating and electricity generation and as a transportation fuel. Biomass is an important fuel in many countries, especially in developing countries for cooking and heating.

Photosynthesis. In the process of photosynthesis, plants convert radiant energy from the sun into chemical energy in the form of glucose or sugar. Water plus carbon dioxide plus sunlight yields glucose plus oxygen. Six water plus six carbon dioxide plus radiant energy yields sugar plus six oxygen.

Source: Adapted from The National Energy Education Project (public domain)

Image with different kinds of biomass types: wood, crops and agricultural residues, vegetable oils and fats, trash/garbage, sewage, and animal manure

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (public domain)

Biomass can be converted to energy in different ways

Biomass is converted to energy through various processes, including:

Direct combustion is the most common method for converting biomass to useful energy. All biomass can be burned directly for heating buildings and water, for providing industrial process heat, and for generating electricity in steam turbines.

A chemical conversion process known as transesterification is used for converting vegetable oils, animal fats, and greases into fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) to produce biodiesel.

Biological conversion of biomass includes fermentation to make ethanol and anaerobic digestion to produce biogas. Ethanol is used as a vehicle fuel. Biogas, also called biomethane or renewable natural gas, is produced in anaerobic digesters at sewage treatment plants and at dairy and livestock operations. Biogas also forms in and may be captured from solid waste landfills. Properly treated renewable natural gas has the same uses as fossil fuel natural gas.

Researchers are working on ways to improve these methods and to develop other ways to convert and use more biomass for energy.

Biomass provided about 5% of U.S. energy in 2023

The industrial sector is the largest consumer of biomass for energy in the United States

The amounts—in TBtu—and percentage shares of total U.S. biomass energy use by consuming sector in 2023 were:

The industrial sector accounted for the highest total annual U.S. biomass consumption in 2023 in terms of energy content and percentage share. The wood products and paper industries use biomass in combined heat and power plants for process heat and to generate electricity for their own use.

The transportation sector accounted for the second-highest amount and percentage share of biomass (as biofuels) consumption in 2023.

The residential and commercial sectors use firewood and wood pellets for heating. Commercial sector biomass consumption includes biogas produced and consumed by municipal sewage treatment facilities and waste landfills.

The electric power sector uses wood and biomass-derived wastes to generate electricity for sale to the other sectors.

The United States is a net exporter of biomass energy

On an energy content basis, U.S. total biomass energy exports exceeded total biomass energy imports in 2023.

Densified biomass fuels (wood pellets and other densified biomass fuels) have become a U.S. export commodity in recent years. In 2023, the United States exported about 8.6 million tons of wood fuel pellets (Table 8).

Last updated: July 30, 2024, with data from the Monthly Energy Review, April 2024; data for 2023 are preliminary.