Woodchuck opens AI-Powered biomass site in Grand Rapids

Governor Gretchen Whitmer joined local and state officials, clean energy advocates, and Grand Rapids business leaders in celebrating the launch of the nation’s first AI-driven wood waste-to-energy facility of its kind.
The new facility represents a breakthrough in sustainable energy production, as it combines advanced machine learning with localised waste diversion to turn construction and demolition wood waste into high-quality biomass for energy producers.
In partnership with NorthStar Clean Energy, a CMS Energy Company, Alloy Partners, Beckett Industries, and The Right Place, Woodchuck is establishing a model that bridges environmental responsibility with economic opportunity.
“Woodchuck’s new facility in Grand Rapids will create good-paying, high-skill jobs and build on Michigan’s leadership in AI, advanced manufacturing, and clean energy,” said Whitmer.
“By turning waste into a productive resource, Woodchuck is helping us protect our precious natural resources and build a more cutting-edge, sustainable economy. Let’s keep working together to secure more projects just like Woodchuck in Michigan so we can lead the future and grow our economy.”
At full capacity, the facility will divert tens of thousands of tons of wood waste from landfills each year - converting it into renewable biomass to power local industries, support utility decarbonisation, and reduce methane emissions from decomposing wood.
By using AI to sort, identify, and process usable materials, Woodchuck said it drastically increases efficiency and transparency in a sector long plagued by fragmentation and contamination challenges.
“Construction and demolition sites produce an enormous amount of recoverable wood, yet the majority of it still ends up in landfills,” said Todd Thomas, CEO of Woodchuck. “This facility changes that. Woodchuck transforms waste into value, reducing costs, reducing landfill usage, and unleashing an abundant energy future!”
