Working With Loggers

Powering The Carolina’s with Working Forests.

Project Green Grid creates a new reliable market for low value wood chips and forest residuals. By converting this material into carbon negative renewable power, we provide logging operations with an additional revenue stream while supporting responsible forest management.

Our goal is simple: support working forests, strengthen logging operations, and ensure more complete use of every harvest.

  • Materials we purchase:

    • Woodchips

    • Chipped tops and limbs

    • Chip thinnings

    • Pulpwood grade material

    • Chipped non-merchantable wood

    • Chipped diseased or storm damaged timber

    • Chipped mill residuals

    • Chipped slash and forest residuals

    This material is converted into renewable power through high efficiency biomass systems.

    • Increases total revenue per tract by utilizing previously low-value fiber

    • Improves harvest economics and load

    • optimization

    • Enhances job profitability and reduces waste

    • Makes thinning operations financially viable

    • Provides predictable, long-term fiber demand and regional procurement

    • Reduces fuel loads and improves stand quality

    • Supports forest regeneration and clears storm debris

    • Maintains long-term forest productivity and health

  • Green Grid generates power through high-efficiency biomass conversion systems that transform sustainably sourced organic feedstock into dispatchable thermal energy and electricity. The platform is engineered for continuous baseload output, integrating advanced emissions controls to deliver reliable, behind-the-meter power directly to large energy users.

  • Green Grid is complementary to the wood and timber industry because it utilizes residual biomass, forestry byproducts, and low-value waste streams that are not suitable for lumber or structural applications. By monetizing these secondary materials and supporting sustainable forest management practices, the platform strengthens the economics of timber operations rather than competing for merchantable wood supply.