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Brought to you by Fink
Description - District heating (DH) systems have been long-established in Canada, particularly in large urban settings and on university and college campuses. These systems efficiently heat multiple buildings by utilizing centralized heat generation and distribution networks. » Read More...
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It’s Bioheat Week! Canadian Biomass and our sister publications at Annex Business Media are putting a special focus on bioheat, including a collection of some of the best articles in our archive on the topic.
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In the frostbitten reaches of the Northwest Territories, the Arctic Energy Alliance (AEA) is redefining community heating with sustainable solutions that have now earned them an honourable mention at the 2024 Canadian Biomass Awards.
» Read More...
District heating (DH) systems have been long-established in Canada, particularly in large urban settings and on university and college campuses. These systems efficiently heat multiple buildings by utilizing centralized heat generation and distribution networks.
» Read More...
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On behalf of our members, the Wood Pellet Association of Canada:
- Pursues market access and solves trade barriers
- Helps improve pellet plant safety
- Promotes Canadian pellet sustainability, quality and reliability
- Increases pellet use in the domestic market
- Provides frequent networking opportunities
If you are interested in joining us, please visit pellet.org/members.
» Learn more
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Most of us who live in the Northern Hemisphere have a fundamental problem: we want to reduce our carbon emissions, but we also need to heat our homes.
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Harry “Dutch” Dresser and Gordon Murray explain how a new white paper addresses barriers that currently restrict the sale of small solid biomass combustors into the Canadian market.
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Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) has received $835,000 from Ottawa’s Greening Government Fund (GGF) to install a new pellet heating system at the Normandin Research Farm in Quebec.
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The senior administrative officer of Wekweètì, N.W.T., says his community is mulling over the possibility of switching to wood biomass as a way to heat homes.
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For Canada’s northern and remote communities, bioenergy represents an opportunity not only for clean, renewable energy, but also for more independence and revenue, according to a new study from Natural Resources Canada.
» Read More...
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