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Sask Party and Sask Energy are ****ing Farmers Good.

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    #37
    Originally posted by jazz View Post
    As a former Saskenergy employee I can fill you in. A dryer is not a reliable source of revenue for them, compared to residential or commercial heating. Who knows when you are going to use it next. Might sit there for the next 10 yrs.

    Thats why the cost recovery doesnt work for them so the burden is placed heavier on the end user.

    A colony is a different beast. Couple dozen people using heating, barns, hot water.

    A grain dryer might be the most important 'harvest management' tool to be adopted if the current "harvest management tool" is banned.

    I know guys that use it every year! Not because they "have to" but because they "want to"!

    So are TransGas and SaskEnergy the same beast? TransGas infrastructure is the arteries and SaskEnergy the retail capillary infrastructure?

    Comment


      #38
      We have two heated garages plus a shop plus two homes and I agree if they ban roundup as a preharvest we will be drying way more in our area.

      So yea demand will be big.

      Again where does the extra 80000 go in the quote

      Comment


        #39
        [QUOTE=farmaholic;433379]A grain dryer might be the most important 'harvest management' tool to be adopted if the current "harvest management tool" is banned.

        I know guys that use it every year! Not because they "have to" but because they "want to"!

        So are TransGas and SaskEnergy the same beast? TransGas infrastructure is the arteries and SaskEnergy the retail capillary infrastructure?[/
        SaskEnergy

        SaskEnergy is a Crown corporation governed by the SaskEnergy Act. By legislation, Crown Investments Corporation of Saskatchewan (CIC) is the holding corporation for SaskEnergy, and has authority to establish direction for SaskEnergy.

        SaskEnergy owns and operates a natural gas distribution utility which has the exclusive legislated franchise to distribute natural gas within Saskatchewan.


        Our Subsidiaries

        SaskEnergy's corporate structure consists of SaskEnergy plus four wholly owned subsidiaries: TransGas Limited, Bayhurst Gas Limited, Many Islands Pipe Lines (Canada) Limited and Saskatchewan First Call Corporation. In addition, SaskEnergy conducts operations through indirectly held subsidiary corporations: Bayhurst Energy Services Corporation and BG Storage Inc.

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          #40
          Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
          So are TransGas and SaskEnergy the same beast? TransGas infrastructure is the arteries and SaskEnergy the retail capillary infrastructure?
          That's essentially it but TransGas serves large industrial and commercial customers directly at higher pressures.

          Cheapest way to get service is to get a group of people together to share the cost. The mob demob is a big part of the bill so that cost and some others can be shared among customers.

          Transgas can do a direct tap to serve remote areas but it has to be for more customers otherwise they don't like doing it. Someone has to go and check those tap offs once a week.

          Many people lie about how much gas they will use too. That's why there was so much under utilized capacity on the system. That might have changed now.

          Also its good to know how much gas and pressure you will really need. I think up to 4 inch poly can be trenched in, larger sized or steel for higher pressures have to be excavated which is much more expensive. Under sizing your dryer a bit and putting crop through it slower over time might give you a much cheaper service.
          Last edited by jazz; Nov 30, 2019, 18:04.

          Comment


            #41
            Click image for larger version

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            The "aorta" and "arteries".

            You would need a smaller localized map of your area to see the local "capillaries".
            I have the map of my area.

            Link to above map:

            http://TransGas.com/maps/DetailedFacilityMapPDF.asp

            Comment


              #42
              In the begining 1970s here in alta NUL started by suppling gas to small towns and large consumers like schools and instutions that were in line of their pipeline,then Peter Loughead said lets gassify rural alta so we can sell gas instead of flaring,so the gas coops were formed,there was almost no on farm dryers then except in southern alta,the lines were engenered to meet consumer demand then came some chicken barns and hog barns but the lines were never engenered for those loads,some looping helped but asking for service for anyone is like asking for a rail spot just for your farm.

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                #43
                Probably sticking with propane and laying in a bunch of storage volume so as to unload super b's of propane may be best. Fill in low season.

                Natural gas in a tank means either compressed or liquid either of which comes with a whole lot of costs.
                There is common sense in setting up near a high pressure line and 3 phase but nothing is free and the logistics of hauling grain to other storage areas is a problem

                Comment


                  #44
                  The point I am trying to make is we are an existing customer since grant Devine put in Natural gas. Yea it changed the farm big time. Oil furnaces were thrown out and a nice clean heating source was put in. Then the new shop was build and wow nice clean heat. Two garages have heat for cars and trucks. Some took and some didn't and the ones who didn't really miss out.

                  My problem is with the cost of creating the holding tank. Who gets the extra $80,000.00 above the basic cost. Seems that Sask energy is ****ing farmers.

                  Comment


                    #45
                    I don't think SaskEnergy installs fūck-all.....contractors do. Jazz?

                    Comment


                      #46
                      Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                      I don't think SaskEnergy installs fūck-all.....contractors do. Jazz?
                      Saskenergy has mostly their own construction crew but hired guns as well when needed.

                      Comment


                        #47
                        Originally posted by jazz View Post
                        Saskenergy has mostly their own construction crew but hired guns as well when needed.
                        What determines who installs which service?

                        ps, I think I left out where, when and why.

                        Comment


                          #48
                          Again priced out a big loop and guess what it’s still 60000 cheaper than the Sask energy quote. Highway robbery.

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