Your Reading List

Ont. biofuel projects get BOPI cash

By 
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: April 18, 2008

A farmer-backed feasibility study on sorghum-based biofuel is among four projects in Ontario to share over $600,000 in federal biofuels funding.

Sweet Sorghum Initiative for Biofuels in Port Lambton, about 50 km east of Detroit, will get $222,975 from the Biofuels Opportunities for Producers Initiative (BOPI) to study the feasibility of sweet sorghum as an alternative to traditional biofuel crops, Ontario MP David Van Kesteren announced Friday in Port Lambton.

Three other Ontario projects confirmed Friday as receiving BOPI funding include:

  • $267,375 for a feasibility study by Ag Bio Energy Park/Lynn Cattle Co. at Lucan, north of London, to develop biodiesel as part of a broader bioenergy facility;
  • Read Also

    Corn bids and offers have lately been far apart, with bids generally a dollar or more below the C$12 per bushel Ontario farmers would like to see. Photo: iStock/Getty Images

    Feed Grain Weekly: Barley, wheat swinging upward

    Prices for feed grains on the Canadian Prairies have “started to rebound a little bit,” said Matt Beusekom, trader with Market Place Commodities in Lethbridge.

  • $73,829 for Huron-Perth Biodiesel Feasibility/Huron Business Development Corp. at Seaforth, west of Kitchener, to see which ag industry byproducts in southwestern Ontario can be processed into a reliable feedstock for biodiesel production; and
  • $54,938 for On-Farm Biodiesel Production at Parkhill, northwest of London, to look at setting up an on-farm biodiesel production system using feed-grade oilseeds.

BOPI, a two-year, $20 million federal program, is meant to help farmers and rural communities get in on and benefit from Canadian biofuel production.

explore

Stories from our other publications