Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Canada, accounting for the supply of biomass Vasto
Sometimes, when you expect the country of Canada, rolling green meadows and forests spring to mind. This is not an entirely inaccurate because the nation still embraces its beautiful and sustainable use of natural resources. One of these resources, a source of renewable energy is biomass.
Biomass is a simple supply of once a living thing can be burned to produce heat for the production of energy. In various parts of Canada, a traveler can see a series of haystacks and piles of wood chips waiting to be converted into electrical energy to other forms of power. Unlike coal or petroleum-based energy sources, biomass is continuously supplied to both natural growth and decay of trees and grasses, or as a byproduct of these same resources. In short, it is a renewable energy.
In terms of renewable energy in Canada, the biomass is responsible for 6% of the power retained in the nation. This is second only to hydropower. It can come from wood residues, crop residues and animal manure. The forest and agricultural industries are for the most part of the supply of biomass in the country.
Paper and reforestation businesses represent a large portion of those industries that use biomass as a renewable source of energy in daily operations. Independent power providers across the country also use biomass to produce electricity. And an even smaller scale, many homes still use fireplaces as primary heat source. A wide range of biomass, biofuel manufactures and suppliers are located across Canada.
CanmetENERGY is investigating methods such as combustion, gasification, and transesterification (the use of new and used vegetable oil) as conversion methods and using biomass. Are also invented methods for the transport, pre-processing, and storage of the biomass.
Methane, sometimes in the form of so-called landfill gas, is known as a greenhouse gas, however, Canada has started to collect the gas in landfills not only resulting in less harmful emissions into the atmosphere, but providing a means of energy production as well as .
The province of Nova Scotia uses of biomass very often. More than 100,000 homes in Nova Scotia use firewood to heat and 22 MW cogeneration plant can be found in Brooklyn in Hants County. This plant, together with two electricity production sawmills, pellet producers and greenhouses all the production waste its use for food plants.
Although the use of biomass as a renewable energy source is not as plentiful as it once was in Canada, the process is going to follow the example of Nova Scotia, Canada and bring back to prominence in the field of biomass ... .
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