The Biomass Assessment Handbook: Bioenergy for a Sustainable Environment

Front Cover
Frank Rosillo-Calle
Earthscan, 2008 - 269 pages
The increasing importance of biomass as a renewable energy source has lead to an acute need for reliable and detailed information on its assessment, consumption and supply. Responding to this need, and overcoming the lack of standardized measurement and accounting procedures, this handbook provides the reader with the skills to understand the biomass resource base, the tools to assess the resource, and explores the pros and cons of exploitation. Topics covered include assessment methods for woody and herbaceous biomass, biomass supply and consumption, remote sensing techniques as well as vital policy issues.International case studies, ranging from techniques for measuring tree volume to transporting biomass, help to illustrate step-by-step methods and are based on field work experience. Technical appendices offer a glossary of terms, energy units and other valuable resource data.

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About the author (2008)

Frank Rosillo-Calle is a Research Fellow at Imperial College's Centre for Environmental Policy and Technology. He has worked in the field of bioenergy related areas for 25 years and has published extensively in this area. Peter de Groot has worked in the field of renewable energy for 25 years. He has recently been involved in practical training courses for rural entrepreneurs. Sarah L. Hemstock is currently Programme Manager of the Cusichaca Trust. She has worked in resource management and sustainable development issues in poor communities. Jeremy Woods is a Research Fellow at Imperial College's Centre for Environmental Policy and Technology. His research focuses on the interaction between development, land use and sustainable use of natural resources, in particular biomass energy.

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