What does pellet Fuel cost?

June 21, 2008 · Filed Under Pellet Fuel · Comments Off 

The current cost of pellet fuel ranges anywhere from $120-200 per ton and averages $150, but of course this will vary by availablility, region and of course season, as do other heating fuels.

One good advantage with Pellet fuel is they can be stored aeasily as they come in bags, so many consumers will buy in the chea summer season rather than wait to the expense winter season.

The selling price, of course, is only a part of the overall cost. The primary issue is the cost of energy, which is measured in dollars per million British thermal units ($/MM Btu). Pellets purchased at the average $150 per ton and burned in a typical pellet stove cost about $11.50 per million Btu, a figure that is less than the cost of electric heat and competitive with average energy costs of some other fuels.


While tables and charts assume average appliance efficiencies and fuel costs, real world experiences vary widely. The actual cost of heating a home must take into account other factors like your homes insulation and tightness of the home, its size and layout, the level of comfort desired, and local climate.

Other economic factors impacting energy costs, though hard to quantify, are also worth consideration. Biomass pellets reduce the use of dwindling fossil fuels, often imported from foreign countries. Every ton of waste material used in pellets fuel reduces the rising costs associated with waste disposal.

Looking to buy Wood Pellet Fuel click here at my Store for Pellet fuel

What advantages do pellet fuel offer?

June 19, 2008 · Filed Under Pellet Fuel · Comment 

The first thing that attracts people to pellet fuel is their convenience. As a bag of pellet fuel can be stored and stacked easily, to store one ton of pellet fuel only requires a volume of 4ft x 4ft x 4ft which is approx half the space of wood. Bags of pellet fuel can be stoed in any small utility room, store, shed, or basement.

Another bag plus is that pellets can be easily loaded into the stove hopper, the small szie of the pellet fuel allows for precisely regulated fuel feed. which in turn allows the combustion air to be regulated easily for optimum burn efficiency since the amount of fuel in the burn pot is predictable and consistent. A high combustion efficiency is also due to the uniformly low moisture content of pellets (consistently below 10% compared to 20 to 60% moisture content in cordwood).


A high heat output and a very low level of uwanted emmissions due to the uniformly low moisture, controlled fuel batches, and precisely regulated combustion of air.

Pellet fuels have other environmental benefits besides clean burns. As a biomass fuel, pellets offer the advantages of sustainable energy supplies through renewable raw materials which in the long term only can benefit the world. In addition, pellets are a by-product, not a primary user, of these renewable materials. Using pellets also helps reduce the costs and problems of waste disposal.

In 1993-94, more than 6.5 million cubic yards of waste were diverted from landfills and converted to home heating in the form of pellets. So you can see you can save money and help the world by using Pellet fuels.

Looking to buy Wood Pellet Fuel click here at my Pellet fuel Store

Where do pellets fuel come from?

June 15, 2008 · Filed Under Pellet Fuel · Comment 

Daily pellet mills receive, sort, grind, dry, compress, and bag wood and other biomass waste products into a conveniently handled pellet fuel (Figure 1).

Curently North America has over sixty pelet mills that produce over 610,000 tons of pellet fuel per year, a figure that has more than doubled in the last five years and will continue to double as fuel prces are raising.


Pellets are available for purchase at nurseries, stove dealers, building supply stores, feed and garden supply stores, and some discount merchandisers. Pellets are typically packaged in forty pound bags and sold by the bag or by the ton (fifty bags on a shipping pallet), but some pellet mills will offer twenty pound bags for easier handling and handling.

Looking to buy Wood Pellet Fuel click here at my Pellet fuel Shop

What are pellets made of ?

June 14, 2008 · Filed Under Pellet Fuel · Comment 

pellet fuelAll pellet fuels are biomass materials meaning products of commonly grown plants and trees. Typically they are made of sawdust and ground wood chips, which are bi products of furnitur, lumber and other products. Binders (lignin) and resins naturally occur in the sawdust and this blinds the pellets together. Other products like nut hulls and other materilas are pelletized in some areas and even unprocessed shelled corn and fruit pits can be burned in a few pellet stove designs.


Your pellet of choice for fuel may depend on its price and also depend on the waste biomass most available to pellet mills in your area. Likewise your choice of appliance design depends on the fuel available.

Looking to buy Wood Pellet Fuel click here at my Pellet fuel Shop