I’ve just arrived in Linköping, Sweden, where I will stay for a month to investigate what separates the Swedish bioenergy experience from the Norwegian. I haven’t really had a chance to do anything yet (been here for less than a day), but while jogging today I noticed something really interesting which I think might be related to Sweden’s high consumption of bioenergy[1].
At first during this jog I was quite cautious – after all, I wouldn’t want to get lost, would I? So, Isimply followed the sidewalk next to the highway leading in and out of Linköping. On both sides of the road there was dense, dark forrest. Typically Swedish, eh? After about five kilometres I was quite bored with the scenary, and when I discovered a path leading into this forrest I figured checking it out couldn’t do much damage.

To my suprise, however, when entering the forrest I found it to be more of a shell than anything else. The forrest was extremely dense wherever it faced a road or any other point where it could easily be seen by many humans, but on the inside what appeared to be a traditional forrest was in reality as much a site for heavy industry as it was “nature”. (Pardon the somewhat crappy quality of the pictures, only had my cellphone cam).

The image above is taken from what appared to be some kind of central where different types of biomass are sorted in piles and containers. This particular site of the forest exaggerates the point slightly, but the rest of the forest displayed similar characteristics.

This image is perahps more representative. It is taken from just behind the dense “wall of trees” facing the road, but shows the difference between the wall or facade, and the “interior” of the forrest. I’m obviously speculating wildly and won’t draw any conlusions based on a small jog through the forest. The trip, however, reminded me of the claims of a Norwegian policymaker I have previously interviewed, who said that Norwegians would never tollerate the types of interventions into “nature” that the Swedish have had to endure to achieve their high levels of bioenergy production. Perhaps this was the type of thing he was talking about?
Perhaps out of sight, out of mind shold be the next large policy-slogan for renewables also in Norway?
[1] This is the second time I collect data through jogging. I should write a methods-article on it..
