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Ridgetown Centre to Focus on Bioenergy, Sustainability
Research projects will create new value-added markets for agricultural products
Bioenergy research and the bioeconomy will be the focus of U of G's new Centre for Agricultural Renewable Energy and Sustainability (CARES) at the Ridgetown Campus. The centre was officially launched last week.
Ontario Agricultural College dean Robert Gordon says the college “is committed to innovative research and technology transfer that support the development of new technologies that will enhance our environment. CARES fits perfectly with this mandate. It will bring together highly skilled people and support applied research and knowledge transfer in renewable energy, which is relevant to the public, private and non-profit sectors.”
The centre will have an agricultural focus, with the goals of strengthening the agricultural sector; improving sustainability and development; increasing alternative energy and energy conservation; and leveraging education, training and research.
It will include a research and demonstration facility to test new technologies.
“We want to do research that will benefit rural Ontario,” says Ridgetown Campus director Art Schaafsma. “The projects we undertake will create new value-added markets for agricultural products.”
The first project is a farm-scale biodiesel demonstration plant that is currently under construction. In June, the federal government announced it's investing more than $900,000 in the project. The funding is being provided through Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada's Advancing Canadian Agriculture and Agri-Food Program, which is delivered in Ontario by the Agricultural Adaptation Council.
In addition to government and University support, the Southwestern Ontario Bioproducts Innovation Network (SOBIN) was instrumental in the conception of CARES. The innovation network promotes new bioproducts, fosters energy conservation and expands alternative energy sources.
Last week, U of G and SOBIN signed a memorandum of understanding pledging to work together to promote bioproduct research and development opportunities. The goal is to substitute non-renewable materials in many manufacturing sectors, consumer goods and services.
“We are very pleased to be working with the University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus on this important new initiative,” says Matt McLean, SOBIN's executive director. “This agreement will strengthen our relationship as we continue to work toward our shared objectives for long-term sustainable resource development.”