I just had a report that a power station in North Dakota burns a combination of corn and coal. Does anyone know anything about this?
Under our Kyoto agreement burning coal should have an quantifiable discount. Paul Martin tried to put that into a bill last week but was opposed by the Conservatives, the Bloc and the NDP. That is a setback for farmers.
Whether we burn wheat in power stations, use it to produce ethanol or plow that organic matter back into the soil someone has to develop a system of compensation for farmers. The flip side of that is a system of penalties for Large Final Emitters (LFE's) such as Saskatchewan Power. In other words those who use electricity should pay more per unit of energy for those generating stations to use a renewable source of fuel rather than a non-renewable such as coal, oil or natural gas.
By the way you may recall the brown-outs in California some ten years ago. California was becoming desperatly short of generating capacity. Their knee jerk reaction was to build a large number of natural gas turbines for electrical generation. Others were busy building natural gas pipelines from Canada down to California and other US destinations. Those pipelines have translated into a huge demand for natural gas. That demand does not exist in some areas of the world. If you saw the last issue of the John Deere magazine "The Furrow" you will have noted the differential in natural gas pricing around the world from a low of 40 cents per thousand cubic feet all the way up to $5.50 per thousand cubic feet in the US. I had a friend check it the other day and the price was $7.19 CDN in Saskatchewan.
The industry is responding by ordering the construction of ships capable of carrying Liquified Natural Gas (LNG). This along with the demand for container ships will delay the construction of bulk ships and will contribute to high ocean freight costs for Canadian grain for years to come.
Under our Kyoto agreement burning coal should have an quantifiable discount. Paul Martin tried to put that into a bill last week but was opposed by the Conservatives, the Bloc and the NDP. That is a setback for farmers.
Whether we burn wheat in power stations, use it to produce ethanol or plow that organic matter back into the soil someone has to develop a system of compensation for farmers. The flip side of that is a system of penalties for Large Final Emitters (LFE's) such as Saskatchewan Power. In other words those who use electricity should pay more per unit of energy for those generating stations to use a renewable source of fuel rather than a non-renewable such as coal, oil or natural gas.
By the way you may recall the brown-outs in California some ten years ago. California was becoming desperatly short of generating capacity. Their knee jerk reaction was to build a large number of natural gas turbines for electrical generation. Others were busy building natural gas pipelines from Canada down to California and other US destinations. Those pipelines have translated into a huge demand for natural gas. That demand does not exist in some areas of the world. If you saw the last issue of the John Deere magazine "The Furrow" you will have noted the differential in natural gas pricing around the world from a low of 40 cents per thousand cubic feet all the way up to $5.50 per thousand cubic feet in the US. I had a friend check it the other day and the price was $7.19 CDN in Saskatchewan.
The industry is responding by ordering the construction of ships capable of carrying Liquified Natural Gas (LNG). This along with the demand for container ships will delay the construction of bulk ships and will contribute to high ocean freight costs for Canadian grain for years to come.
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