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Fibrominn

Coordinates: 45°19′20″N 95°37′48″W / 45.32222°N 95.63000°W / 45.32222; -95.63000
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Fibrominn
Map
Country
  • United States
LocationBenson, Minnesota
Coordinates45°19′20″N 95°37′48″W / 45.32222°N 95.63000°W / 45.32222; -95.63000
StatusOperational
Commission dateOctober 2007
Decommission date
  • November 2018
OwnersContourGlobal, LP
Thermal power station
Primary fuelPoultry litter
Power generation
Nameplate capacity55-megawatt

Fibrominn, located in Benson, Minnesota, was the first power plant in the United States designed to burn poultry litter as its main source of fuel. It produced 55 megawatts of electric power by burning turkey manure combined with wood chips. All of the energy produced was required by state lawmakers to be purchased by Xcel Energy. The plant was developed by Fibrowatt LLC, part of the Homeland Renewable Energy Group, which was set up by the management team which built the world's first three poultry-litter-fueled power plants (in the UK). Construction began in 2005 and the plant began operating in 2007. Grand opening ceremonies were held on 12 October 2007 and 13 October 2007. The State of Minnesota required that the Xcel purchase power from the plant until at least 2028. The plant at one point had been owned by ContourGlobal, LP.

However, the cost of generating energy from the unique supply of biomass became increasingly costly compared to other renewable sources.

In 2017, Xcel Energy successfully lobbied state lawmakers to allow it to buy the plant in order to decommission it because the high cost of operations were being forced onto ratepayers.

In 2018 Xcel paid $24.5-million to the plant's owners and was expected to pay the city of Benson as much as $20-million over a period of years to make up for the city's loss of expected revenue once the plant closed.

In 2018, there was an effort by Brightmark Energy of San Francisco to purchase the plant and covert it for use in generating renewable natural gas from turkey litter and other biomass, however after 18-months the project never materialized and the effort failed.

Xcel noted in regulatory filings that the plant's closure would eventually save ratepayers hundreds of millions of dollars over roughly 10 years.

The plant was demolished in August 2019.

See also