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Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Good morning,
We have seen stories similar to today's before in Living
Green. As technology improves (and the environmental and
financial cost of fossil fuels increases) I believe we
will see more of these.
Thanks for reading,
Your Living Green editor
Email the Editor
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Investors are lining up to support a planned clean energy
park in Greeley, Colorago that eventually will convert some
of the methane gas released from the manure piles into
power for a cheese factory and other businesses. JBS, which
runs two of the largest feed yards and the local slaughter-
house, is testing a new technology that heats the cattle
excrement and turns it into energy.
"What once used to be a waste stream that was just a by-
product ... they are now recognizing has value," said Bruce
Biggi, the economic development coordinator for the city of
Greeley, which received an $82,000 grant from the governor's
energy office this year for the park.
The idea is to lure new business to the area with what Biggi
likes to call its renewable natural gas - the endless supply
of methane from cheap manure.
By reducing the amount of the potent greenhouse gas released
into the air, the projects also potentially could turn cow
dung into dollars, if a climate bill before Congress becomes
law.
"Agriculture and agribusiness is what Greeley is all about,"
Biggi said. "We needed to take that strong traditional
economic base and ... merge it with emerging renewable energy
and technology."
Waste may be the new energy crop in these parts. But else-
where, communities are looking anew at power sources such as
the sun and wind that may exist in their own backyards.
The shift is being driven partly by legislation in Congress
that would reduce the gases linked to global warming.
Should President Barack Obama sign the bill, it would put
a price on each ton of carbon dioxide released. That would
drive up the cost of polluting fossil fuels such as oil and
natural gas and lead to investment in cleaner sources of
energy.
Getting into the game now - like JBS and the investors eyeing
Greeley's energy park are doing - could potentially reap
profits: selling credits generated by reducing greenhouse
gases now into the emissions-trading market the bill would
create.
That market could prove lucrative for projects that reduce
methane, which is 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide
when it comes to trapping heat in the earth's atmosphere.