Yet here in southern B.C. the snow pack in the mountains is 20% above normal .
And yet your snowfields and glaciers are still shrinking. Try another anecdote.
Yet here in southern B.C. the snow pack in the mountains is 20% above normal .
And yet your snowfields and glaciers are still shrinking. Try another anecdote.
Really? You are splitting hairs and apparently have no idea how widespread the use of coal and wood were a century ago. Almost every home was heated by one or the other and it was also used in industry. Tell me, how many modern nations still use wood in an industrial capacity? And how many modern nations use coal as the main source of home heating and cooking?
Well Canada for one. Lots of wood used for industrial heating in Europe and Asia as well. But reality always destroys your dismal arguments.
Could you actually provide some evidence instead of nonsensical BS?
You might want to look at this. Somehow wood seems to be missing from the graph except as the burning of a waste product.
You need to replace those emissions with dollar bills.
You should have all those cars be wired to a trolley like set of cables and the vehicle feeds power to the grid, as long as people are using vehicles buildings will have the needed power. Pay your parking by winding up a genset for a certain amount of time with your car is another option as is the car being the power-plant and you plug it into your office and your home and that is where you get your power from
You should have all those cars be wired to a trolley like set of cables and the vehicle feeds power to the grid, as long as people are using vehicles buildings will have the needed power. Pay your parking by winding up a genset for a certain amount of time with your car is another option as is the car being the power-plant and you plug it into your office and your home and that is where you get your power from
Actually, all of the maritime provinces are using wood burning stoves in their homes to supplement heating because natural gas is unavailable, electric and oil heat are way too expensive. Those who don't have access to wood burn coal.
The Northwest Territories is powered by diesel and Inuvik is powered by LNG.
In fact, most northern communities across this nation use wood, coal and fossil fuel for power and heating.
I don't see this in your graph.
I know this because I am in the business of bringing that fuel north to many of these communities.
All of them? That would mean every inhabitant of the Atlantic provinces. I wonder what they are doing with all the natural gas that is being shipped there from Alberta. And as usual you are ignoring my point. I don't care how many people have a nice log fire in their homes; my point is that the industrial use of wood is almost nonexistent today, but three centuries ago that is all there was. And your information about the NWT simply proves my point.
And yet your snowfields and glaciers are still shrinking. Try another anecdote.
Glaciers shrink and expand over time. They are dynamic not statiC. They come and thy go. So? Solar output is slumping, solar powerbiz too, let's burn the trees. Pound for pound our best BTU deal still after many centuries. Burn. Trees are renewable.Green energy, they can even be convinced to grow in rows.![]()
Wood is used extensively world wide for power. We export it from BC as well as use it here. Mostly compressed into bricks or sometimes logs similar to presto-logs but without the resin.
Quit getting high on smurfberries and trying looking things ul before before blowing a smurf gasket.I'm still waiting for you to give me some real evidence regarding the use of wood as an industrial fuel. The fact that you haven't tells me you probably can't.
Nacogdoches Wood-Fired Power Project, United States of America
Texas power market
The Nacogdoches power plant is a wood-fired power-generation facility located in Sacul, Texas, about 230 miles from Austin. Southern Power, a subsidiary of Southern Company, bought it from American Renewables on 9 October 2009.
The plant has an installed capacity of 100MW, sufficient to power 70,000 homes, and can offset up to 300,000t of carbon each year. The project's ground-breaking ceremony took place in November 2009. The commercial operations of the biomass plant began in June 2012. It is the largest biomass-fuelled electricity-generating facility in the US and won the Best Bioenergy Project title for 2012, at the Power-Gen international conference.
What are you talking about... just green wash it like they're doing SUCKA!
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Yes the certainly do. But only when the temperature gets warmer or colder. Strangely enough burning wood is actually carbon neutral. Unfortunately, there is simply not enough wood to sustain that sort of consumption worldwide.
I'm still waiting for you to give me some real evidence regarding the use of wood as an industrial fuel. The fact that you haven't tells me you probably can't.
Last Canadian Oil Sands holdouts forced to tender to $4.9B Suncor offer | Calgary Herald
You do realize companies are losing money in oil right?
There is no need to wash anything.
You do realize companies are losing money in oil right?
There is no need to wash anything.
All of them? That would mean every inhabitant of the Atlantic provinces. I wonder what they are doing with all the natural gas that is being shipped there from Alberta. And as usual you are ignoring my point. I don't care how many people have a nice log fire in their homes; my point is that the industrial use of wood is almost nonexistent today, but three centuries ago that is all there was. And your information about the NWT simply proves my point.
Was it a "normal" ice road year? If that system becomes unusable a whole lot of Northern Canada will have to be abandoned.