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Renewable diesel, canola-crushing plant to be built in Regina

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    #31
    Much I am suspicious of all these announcements coming to fruition, can’t ignore the elephant in the room. Wasn’t long ago when they went from being a minor buyer to a major customer and pain in the arse. The more crushed and consumed at home still benefits our region more so than shipping raw materials. Besides, it reduces reliance on dealing with bullies and shrinking markets long term. That said, we still need an export channel to keep domestic buyers honest.

    Comment


      #32
      I agree the play is on now with crushers needing Canola and no one is buying seed out of port. We need them to pay for the product.

      Crush plant they pay for in a couple of years is a money maker. Big money maker.







      Figure out how to make real money on meal and its a triple crown.

      Oil, Meal = $$$$$

      Comment


        #33
        Saw a write up the other day about some researcher for climate change said we could use the "waste" from canola oil crushing to make stove pellets. They were referring to meal.
        They were just waiting for some more research funding to figure out how to make it into pellets.

        Or maybe the could go down to the place the meal comes from and get a few bags of pellets as that is the only way you can buy canola meal.

        But there's your answer.
        Just burn it and save the environment.

        Burn it all down.

        Comment


          #34
          yep, just like the fukhead , imbecile son of a ******* that think falling trees in northern Sask. with a faller buncher, hauling said logs to a chipper/pelleting plant with diesel super bees , then loading said pellets onto a diesel train and hauling to BC . then unloading with a crane and load on a diesel ship(right beside the chinese coal loading facility) to be burned in Japan (with no emissions, lol)
          same as the *** pricks don't hafta pay carbon tax when they import this coal or wood chips . same as middle east imported oil has no carbon tax
          any of you stunned assholes that buy this fairy tale are complete *** idiots
          Last edited by Guest; Jan 18, 2022, 18:41.

          Comment


            #35
            Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
            Saw a write up the other day about some researcher for climate change said we could use the "waste" from canola oil crushing to make stove pellets. They were referring to meal.
            They were just waiting for some more research funding to figure out how to make it into pellets.

            Or maybe the could go down to the place the meal comes from and get a few bags of pellets as that is the only way you can buy canola meal.

            But there's your answer.
            Just burn it and save the environment.

            Burn it all down.
            Gawd reality is crazy. You can’t make this stuff up. Imagine the bugger will get a govt grant to develop a pellet. They could just burn barrels of the stuff down Dewdney. Keep the homeless warm and gang bangers can warm up in between shaking down old ladies.

            Comment


              #36
              Originally posted by caseih View Post
              any of you stunned assholes that buy this fairy tale are complete *** idiots
              Way to go case. We're having a good civil discussion, and you had to go and invite Chuck by calling him personally.

              Comment


                #37
                Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                Way to go case. We're having a good civil discussion, and you had to go and invite Chuck by calling him personally.
                Just to add to the 'misery' with more company...

                The 'green' row over the UK's largest renewable power plant
                By Christine Ro
                Business of Technology reporter
                Published4 days ago
                Share
                Related Topics
                COP26
                Fields alongside Drax
                IMAGE SOURCE, CHRISTINE RO
                Image caption,
                Drax is the UK's biggest renewable energy plant
                This is the second of two articles examining the way wood pellets are produced and used as a green energy source. The first article can be found here.
                The Drax power station near Selby, Yorkshire, is surrounded by both busy roads and small farms. A faint humming noise emanates all around the complex, while water vapour rises slowly and steadily from the cooling towers.
                The scale of operations at this converted coal plant is gargantuan. It's the UK's largest renewable power station. Wood pellets are imported from the US on enormous ships that take up to 21 days in transit. They are then transported overland via rail, and Drax receives about 17 deliveries of wood pellets a day, operating 24 hours a day, six days a week.
                Once inside, the pellets are pulverised into a powder, blown into boilers and then burnt. The steam from this process powers turbines that produce electricity.
                In 2020, Drax generated 11% of the UK's renewable power - enough for four million homes. While the UK is by far the largest consumer of wood pellets, globally, biomass is a massive industry that is growing in value and reach.
                Biomass furnace at Drax Power Station
                IMAGE SOURCE, DANIEL LEWIS/DRAX
                Image caption,
                The power station uses wood pellets to make electricity
                The EU is also a major market, and South Korea and Japan are increasingly interested as well. This means that the search has widened for new sources of wood, for instance from Estonia.
                Yet, Drax's green credentials have been comprehensively challenged by environmentalists and others recently. The climate think tank, Ember, calculates that the power station is now the UK's single largest source of carbon dioxide. The firm's share price weakened on this news breaking although it has subsequently regained ground. The stock was removed from the S&P Global Clean Energy Index in October after the index changed its methodology.
                When it comes to the arcane world of climate accounting, biomass energy is classed as renewable based on the premise that trees grow back. So greenhouse gas emissions from trees are counted in the nation of land use rather than the place where they are burnt.
                Yet, Mary Booth, founder of the environmental organisation Partnership for Policy Integrity, points out that "just because something is counted as zero because of an accounting convention does not mean it's carbon neutral".
                Drax received £832m in UK government subsidies in 2020
                According to the think tank Chatham House, wood pellets from the US burnt in the UK generated 13-16 million tonnes of CO2 emissions in 2019 - equivalent to the emissions from 6-7 million cars.
                Drax disputes this analysis and a company spokesperson says its biomass "meets the highest sustainability standards and these ensure that we do not use biomass that causes deforestation, forest decline or carbon debt".
                Drax's latest annual report shows that its largest source of biomass pellets is low-grade roundwood. This is not waste and residue but wood that has little economic value. Yet it still has environmental value, if it were left intact to soak up atmospheric carbon.
                In 2020, the company received £832m in UK government subsidies - which are set to continue until at least 2027. According to many environmentalists, this support would be better directed to wind and solar energy, which are more energy efficient, cost-effective and more carbon neutral.
                At Glasgow's COP26 climate summit, officials did not take a clear stance on biomass - a leading EU climate official called for its biomass use, though with reservations.
                US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry (4th L) and Chief Negotiator of China, Xie Zhenhua (5th L) leave the room at the UN Climate Change Conference COP26 on November 13, 2021 in Glasgow, Scotland.
                IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
                Image caption,
                Delegates at the COP26 summit in Glasgow did not clarify the position of wood pellets
                However, the Glasgow Leaders' Declaration on Forests and Land Use, signed by leaders of over 130 countries, does commit them to curbing forest loss by 2030.
                It is as yet unclear how this is to be done. Elly Pepper, a campaigner at transatlantic environmental coalition, Cut Carbon Not Forests, warns the agreement will fail if countries do not come to terms with their dangerous reliance on biomass.
                "It's hypocritical for countries, including the UK, to sign this declaration while continuing billions in subsidies for this dirty energy industry," she says.
                It seems unlikely that the UK government will end Drax's biomass subsidies ahead of their contracted end date in 2027. Some environmentalists have turned their sights instead to influencing future UK policy, such as the Biomass Strategy 2022. They're also hoping to reform the EU's Renewable Energy Directive, which subsidises biomass energy.
                Railway lines alongside Drax
                IMAGE SOURCE, CHRISTINE RO
                Image caption,
                The plant receives about 17 deliveries of wood pellets a day
                Peg Putt, who coordinates biomass campaigns for the Environmental Paper Network, worries that COP 26 could actually worsen the reliance on biomass.
                The agreement on "the phase down of unabated coal power" could actually be interpreted as permitting mixing biomass with coal, she says, because "throwing biomass in with coal and co-firing appears to magically decrease the emissions and thus the emissions intensity of coal generation".
                Drax, meanwhile, is looking beyond the next decade. It has proposed the development of BECC, or bioenergy with carbon capture and storage. This is a technology that essentially removes and stores carbon dioxide.
                Drax argues that putting carbon dioxide under the North Sea will turn its operations carbon negative. Yet many environmentalists counter that this would just be a further licence to pollute.
                Though there's been a public consultation process for the BECCS project, locals generally are not sure what is being proposed. The thick folders explaining the proposal at the library and the Drax-affiliated social club have been roundly ignored, while the consultation documents staked to a village field have whipped forlornly in the wind.
                Aerial view of Drax Power Station, the third largest polluting power station in Europe located close to Selby, North Yorkshire
                IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
                Image caption,
                The company argues that putting carbon dioxide under the North Sea will turn its operations carbon negative
                The future sourcing of energy is an especially hot topic due to the UK's current energy crisis.
                A dramatic rise in the price of wholesale gas is the main reason consumers are facing huge increases in energy bills, and has also caused the collapse of some energy providers.
                Drax says that biomass is a reliable alternative source of energy, but many environmentalists remain sceptical.
                "We need real transformative change, not false solutions like biomass," says Ms Pepper.
                Reporting for this article was supported by the Exploring Biomass and Climate Change fellowship of the National Press Foundation.
                More on this story
                Controversy over wood pellets as a green energy source
                Published7 days ago
                https://www.bbc.com/news/business-59546281

                The definition of INSANITY
                Cheers

                Comment


                  #38
                  Luckily numb nuts planted a billion trees , oh wait , it was only one ?
                  Also do you suppose they dont know that trees sequester carbon???
                  FM , maybe they don’t !???

                  Comment


                    #39
                    Have Had a pellet stove for over 25 years and it felt pretty nice having a nap beside it after doing chores in the blizzard yesterday. And in those 25 years I used good quality wheat instead of pellets a couple of times because it was cheaper. But nobody cared what farmers were getting paid for there wheat !

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