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WomeninForestry.ca is an online hub with dozens of original interviews, contributed content, videos and a podcast about women across Canada working in the pulp and paper, wood products, logging and biomass industries.
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The change in net profit reflects higher distribution costs, higher amortization costs reflecting the company’s new production facilities, and higher production costs due to higher fibre costs, cash conversion costs and costs incurred for third-party wood pellet purchases.
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Bioindustrial Innovation Canada will offer its services for the new Ontario Bioindustrial Innovation Network from this location.
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“We closed 2019 strong, achieving our highest-ever quarterly adjusted EBITDA on more than one million metric tons of wood pellets sold,” said John Keppler, chairman and CEO of Enviva.
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“Ending the use of coal at Drax is a landmark in our continued efforts to transform the business and become a world-leading carbon negative company by 2030,” said Drax CEO Will Gardiner.
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PRODESA’s new pellet plant in Vietnam already in operation
The South Korean company Uju Vina has started up its new pellet plant in Vietnam.
The plant, which has been completely designed and built by PRODESA under a turnkey contract, will produce 120,000 tons of pellets a year that will be mainly exported to South Korea and Japan.
The plant has been designed and equipped under the highest standards of the industry to make sure the best performance and availability, while producing the finest quality of pellets.
PRODESA will continue providing after sales service from its subsidiary in Hanoi where Prodesa has invested in a new warehouse and service workshop.
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Tsay Keh Dene Nation has embarked on a bioheat project that aims to liberate its primary village from reliance on diesel generators. With support from Chu Cho Environmental the project aims to completely displace diesel consumption in the community.
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Steven Townsend, PEI’s chief boiler inspector, knew that boiler systems installed open to the air are subject to problems associated with corrosion, but the province’s rules forced such installations. Harry “Dutch” Dresser takes readers through Townsend’s efforts to change PEI’s biomass boiler regulations.
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