Indonesian tropical forest

Biomass Fuel That Supports
a Lower-Carbon Future

Wood pellet is classified as renewable energy in most national and international frameworks. When sourced responsibly and used in industrial boilers, it delivers a significantly lower lifecycle carbon footprint than coal or fossil fuels.

~95% Lower lifecycle CO₂ vs coal Based on biomass carbon cycle classification
≤0.05% Sulfur content vs 0.3–3% in typical coal
≤2% Ash content vs 10–20% in coal
100% SVLK certified suppliers Mandatory Indonesian timber verification

SVLK — Indonesia's Mandatory Timber Verification

SVLK (Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu) is Indonesia's mandatory legal timber verification system, required by government regulation for all timber and wood product exports.

It verifies that wood is sourced legally — from licensed forests and processing facilities — providing a full chain of custody from forest to export.

Mandatory for all Indonesian wood product exports
Verified by independent third-party auditors
Required by regulation — not voluntary
Accepted by EU Timber Regulation (EUTR)
Every supplier in our network is SVLK certified

SVLK Certification

Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu

All wood pellets exported through PT. Vernel Agro Indonesia come from suppliers who hold valid SVLK certification — verified annually by accredited independent auditors under the supervision of Indonesia's Ministry of Environment and Forestry.

Important: We do not currently hold ENplus, SBP, or FSC certification. SVLK is the compliance standard for our current target markets in Asia and the Middle East, where these international certifications are not required.

Wood Pellet vs Coal

The data below reflects generally accepted emissions and performance comparisons between industrial-grade wood pellet and coal. Actual values vary by fuel grade, boiler type, and combustion conditions.

Parameter Coal Wood Pellet Vernel Agro
CO₂ Lifecycle Emissions ~820 g/kWh ~30–50 g/kWh
SOx Emissions High (0.3–3% sulfur) Very low (≤0.05% sulfur)
Ash Content 10–20% ≤2%
Particulate Matter High Significantly lower
Renewable Classification No Yes (biomass)
Carbon Tax Exposure High and growing Lower / exempt in many jurisdictions

CO₂ lifecycle figure based on biomass carbon cycle classification (carbon absorbed during tree growth offsets combustion emissions). Actual reduction depends on combustion efficiency and supply chain distance. Sources: IEA, IPCC, and industry technical references.

Why Wood Pellet Is Considered Carbon Neutral

When trees grow, they absorb CO₂ from the atmosphere. When wood is burned as fuel, that CO₂ is released — but the same amount was already sequestered during the tree's growth cycle.

This is fundamentally different from coal, which releases carbon that has been stored underground for millions of years — adding net new CO₂ to the atmosphere.

This is why wood pellet — when sourced from legally managed wood waste and sawdust — is classified as a renewable energy source and qualifies under most national renewable energy programs.

Our wood pellets are produced from tropical wood waste, sawdust, and processing residues — not from primary forest harvesting.
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01

Trees Grow

Tropical trees and plantation forests absorb CO₂ from the atmosphere over years of growth.

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02

Wood Processing

Sawmills and wood processors generate residues — sawdust, offcuts, and waste wood.

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03

Pellet Production

Wood residues are dried and compressed into dense pellets under SVLK-certified facilities.

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04

Export

Pellets are exported with full documentation to industrial buyers.

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05

Combustion

CO₂ released during combustion equals the CO₂ the wood absorbed during growth.

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06

Cycle Continues

New trees continue growing and absorbing CO₂, completing the renewable cycle.

Ready to Switch to Renewable Biomass Fuel?

Tell us about your current fuel and boiler setup. We'll help you understand what switching to wood pellet means for your operation — in cost, logistics, and sustainability reporting.