Reading Time: < 1 minute Manitoba plans to amend its Real Property Act to make it easier for landlords of wind farm operators to sell or mortgage the wind farm’s host land. Currently, anyone doing a title search on land that hosts wind turbines must review not only the owner’s interest, but all the registered interests affecting the wind farm, […] Read more
Man. streamlines land registration for wind farms
T.O. firm says new cold-press canola process more efficient
Reading Time: 2 minutes New oil extraction technology proposed by a Toronto processing firm is expected to create a higher-protein byproduct from the canola it says it plans to crush somewhere in Saskatchewan. Bio-Extraction Inc. (“BioExx” for short) says its new technology will allow it to save the soluble proteins from canola meal that are lost to high heat […] Read more
Ottawa commits to Sask. ethanol project
Reading Time: < 1 minute The federal government’s ecoABC initiative will provide $5.05 million toward a northwestern Saskatchewan ethanol plant project, Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz announced today. North West Terminal, an farmer-owned inland grain terminal company at Unity, southwest of North Battleford, announced the 25-million-litre-per year project in mid-summer 2006 and plans to have it running in September 2008. The […] Read more
Wheat board becomes podcaster
Reading Time: < 1 minute The Canadian Wheat Board will offer Prairie grain farmers the option to download podcasts of analysis and crop outlooks to hear on their home computers or portable MP3 players. (Podcasts are downloadable radio-style broadcasts available from a number of web sites. The name came from their introduction on iTunes, the online music store operated by […] Read more
Man. moves to regulate biofuels sector
Reading Time: < 1 minute A licensing regime for biofuel makers, new fuel quality standards and mandated biodiesel sales will be pumped into a package of biofuels legislation coming back to the Manitoba legislature, the province announced today. The Biofuels Amendment Act, which sputtered before the assembly shut down for this summer’s provincial election, proposes the licensing system, fuel standards […] Read more
Alta. harvest continues around showers: AFSC
Reading Time: < 1 minute Harvest was two-thirds complete in Alberta as of Sept. 27, despite cool weather and sporadic rain provincewide, according to the provincial Agriculture Financial Services Agency (AFSC). The harvest stood at 65.2 per cent complete that week, up from 38 per cent on Sept. 13. Yields are projected to continue declining on remaining crops but are […] Read more
Sask. avian flu cull complete
Reading Time: 2 minutes The culling is finished on a Regina Beach, Sask. poultry farm where a highly-pathogenic strain of avian influenza broke out among birds, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said yesterday. With the farm now completely depopulated of birds, next must come the cleaning and disinfection of all barns, vehicles, equipment and tools on the property, CFIA […] Read more
Cost weighs on fertilizer decisions: survey
Reading Time: 2 minutes A fertilizer industry group’s survey found farmers pay close attention to the costs of fertilizer and supplements and base their buying decisions on “perceived benefit and availability.” The Canadian Fertilizer Products Forum survey, conducted in April by Ipsos Reid, found that of the 400 farmers surveyed, about half cited price as the main reason for […] Read more
Prop bottles led to Stella scare: Labatt
Reading Time: < 1 minute A number of Stella Artois bottles filled with concentrated alcohol strictly for display were the cause of a tampering scare in July, the brand’s brewer announced today. Toronto’s Labatt Breweries said its investigation found that the affected bottles were meant for display purposes and were supposed to be mounted inside Plexiglas casings. For display purposes, […] Read more
Ecological pilot targets Missisquoi Bay farmers
Reading Time: < 1 minute A $1.27 million ecological goods and services (EG&S) pilot project to reduce blue-green algae in Missisquoi Bay will fund about 60 farmers in the area to cut down on phosphorus entering the watershed. Missisquoi Bay, south of Montreal on Quebec’s border with Vermont, has become a “laboratory” in recent years for studying phosphorus mobility in […] Read more