Thanks, Ben and James, for your replies.
Ben, I'm glad to hear that efficiency is a high priority for you, and I agree that big gains could be made by reorganizing our communities and economies. Your assurances regarding the abundance of dead wood and the limiting effect of the high labor cost of gasification are not very convincing though. Re. dead wood, any permie will tell you that dead wood plays a vital part in forest health. Also, if dead wood is in short supply, people will "make" dead wood from living wood. With relatively little time and effort, a few dozen or a few hundred trees can be girdled with an axe or chainsaw and they will be quite dead by next year.
Regarding high labor input, well, automation has played a big part in the destruction of our forests, and I see no reason why this would change. A wood chipper run on wood gas, or a machine like the one in this video are both "great" labor-saving devices.
Just imagine a hybrid of Exxon and Domtar operating at 10,000x this scale and you will get an idea of the sort of threat I foresee. Not that any of that is really necessary. We were doing a fine job of razing the forests long before the chain saw came along. And that was just when we were using the wood for cooking, heating and building. Imagine how much worse it will be if we are also trying to fuel our fleets of cars, trucks and tractors, let alone our power plants and factories.