The Forest Products Financial Assistance Program (FPFAP) was established in 2014 with funds provided by the U.S. Forest Service. This program supports the development and expansion of forestry and agroforestry product industries in the State of Washington.

This program has an emphasis on use of woody biomass, including by-products of forestry management activities and wood products manufacturing. Proposed projects may utilize biomass to provide thermal energy, electrical energy, or engineered fuel products, or result in energy efficiency improvements. Additional program goals include enhancing forest ecosystem function, reducing forest fire hazards, and supporting resiliency of rural, timber-dependent communities.

All grants are matched at least dollar-for-dollar with other sources of non-federal funding.

Commerce has announced the grant awardees for $483K in funding for wood energy projects

Darrington Wood Innovation Center (Darrington): $160,886 to support design of a cutting-edge Wood Innovation Center. The first development phase will consist of infrastructure and three buildings hosting a mass timber plant, a modular fabrication facility using cross-laminated timber (CLT) panels produced at the plant and a small European-grade re-manufacturing sawmill facility.

The Lands Council (Spokane): $25,000 for conversion of residual woody debris to biochar, promoting an economically viable approach to forest health enhancement and carbon sequestration, eliminating costly material transport and associated emissions, and simplifying logistics through onsite production. (Biochar, which looks like common barbeque charcoal and is often used as a soil amendment, is produced through a special process that reduces contamination and safely stores carbon to potentially help mitigate climate change.)

San Juan Islands Conservation District (Friday Harbor): $181,882 to develop appropriate energy and biochar technologies to process woody biomass at different distances from town centers. This proposal includes a technology assessment, site analysis and conceptual design of an advanced wood energy microgrid gasifier system to generate heat and power for community facilities on Orcas Island.

Wind River Biomass (Stabler): $115,000 to design, procure and test an efficient system for sorting, gathering and transporting woody biomass – primarily harvest slash – based on a system common to Scandinavian countries.

All of these competitive grant awards are conditional upon execution of final project agreements and performance-based contracts with Commerce. The projects, selected from among eight applicants requesting a total of $801,807, represent a wide geographical range of communities across the state.

Bidders Conference

A Bidders Conference to assist with the application process was held Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019. The conference call recording, presentation, and transcript are posted below.

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