Wood power? I'm doing a project using wood power and i was wondering...

I'm doing a project using wood power and i was wondering if burning wood is considered wood power.
i don't want to burn the wood and own my teacher articulate that's not a form of wood power and give me an F.
Answers:    Wood have a heat good point of 4000 to 8000 btu/lb (British Thermal Units per pound). The dryer the wood the higher the warmth value.
When burned that warmth is released and the exhaust is directed through a boiler where the roast is transfered to water. The wet is boiled and the steam is sent to a turbine which turns an electrical generator. Power from the generator is sent to the grid and to your home.

It takes almost 1.5 tons of wood with 20% moisture to produce one Megawatt of electricity for one hour. Over the course of a 24 hour extent a power plant will use between 500 to 800 tons of fuel to continually produce 21MW of power.
Well if power equals energy consequently yes burning wood is considered wood power. Just tell the lecturer you are converting the potential energy (stored energy) contained by the wood to kinetic energy (energy surrounded by motion). I am assuming you will find a way to illustrate the kinetic strength.