Waste to energy projects offer alternatives to burning and landfills
Flax and canola straw, sawdust, and wood waste— there have been very few uses for these biowaste products, and producers have been left wondering how to get rid of them.
However, new technological advances are popping up in Saskatchewan to give these byproducts a secondary use and a cleaner way to dispose of them.
For Tina Rasmussen of the Meadow Lake Tribal Council, there were two main reasons MLTC moved forward with the Bioenergy Centre, of which commercial operations happened earlier this year; environmental protection and environmental stewardship.
Wood waste from NorSask Forest Products, which was previously burned in a beehive burner is now being used as fuel in a process that produces both heat and electricity. The electricity produced from a renewable resource is fed directly into the SaskPower provincial grid replacing energy created by carbon-producing fossil fuels. The electricity produced through the process can provide baseload power for up to 5,000 homes, Rasmussen told farmnewsNOW. The bioenergy plant has been sized to the waste stream of the MLTC mill but there are two other mills in the area, and another in Glaslyn if wood waste is in short supply.