Bushpro, Vernon, B.C., Canada Proudly Canada's largest manufacturer and
distributor of quality t

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Complete green energy production has been set for 2020

Run Of River (ROR) Power develops renewable, sustainable energy through its portfolio of run-of-river and biomass projects in B.C., and the company is working toward biomass energy production by answering BC Hydro calls for power in energy production in wood waste. Rick Connors spoke on behalf of Western Biomass Power Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of ROR Power that runs out of Prince George, B.C.. 
    
"Our Suskwa project is taking advantage of First Nation natural resources in the Gitxsan traditional territory," a land-base that spans 33,000 sq km in the Pacific North West. "They have decadent forests and mountain pine beetle damaged wood fibre," says Connors,  "Rejuvenation of these decadent (80 year old) forests is necessary because they are no longer sequestering carbon." 
    
Connors notes that a healthy full grown hemlock will sequester 20 lbs of carbon per year and produce oxygen in abundance for people to breath. Due to their current condition the forests surrounding Hazelton and Smithers are ideal places to start seriously greening the Canadian economy. This 40 year project is designed to take out declining grades of wood and replace this decadent fibre with vibrant new forests. 
    
"We are proposing to build a high-pressure boiler to burn wood and heat water to create steam." Steam will spin a turbine, which charges a generator to produce 34 MWh of electrical energy. Connors says the project puts a $150 million economic infusion into a depressed area, and, "the Gitxsan people are partners having full ownership, buying in, and completely participating. And it is a project that provides links to all kinds of jobs in the forestry sector." 
    
A BC Hydro purchase of power from the plant would give Gitxsan a long-term cash flow running many years. The proposed plant site will be constructed on 16-acres including a former gravel pit operation outside of Hazelton,  says Connors, responsible re-application of land used as development property in the region.  
    
The power plant operations will employee 35 people full-time, and another 130 more jobs will be found in the 'periphery' doing  wood salvage, working in the greenhouse that provides seedlings to reforestation projects, and logging for a sawmill cooperative with Gitxsan license holders feeding the fibre from an Annual Allowable Cut in their territory. 
    
Suskwa depends largely on decadent forests for fibre, and other biomass fuel loads will be found in MPB killed lodgepole pine. The plant has been designed for a 40-year life span. The Run Of River Power development in Gitxsan is joined by an even bigger biomass power proposal (that has a shorter life span of about 20 years), says Connors. 
    
"The 60 MWh Tsilhqot’in Biomass Power Project is to be located 75 kms west of  Williams Lake in Hanceville, B.C.," and most of the biomass fuel for this energy production will be found in the MPB forests of the central interior. The Tsilhqot’in proposal is a 50/50 partnership with the First Nations and these folks have a huge problem with 'beetle' kill in their forests. They have less work to do in reversing decadent forest conditions. 
    
In this regard the Tsilhqot’in proposal focuses on beetle kill (and reforestation), which shortens the time span of energy generation according to this one-shot consumption of beetle damaged trees. Meanwhile the BC government's self-sufficiency targets for energy production are slated to be 2016, and the goal of complete green energy production has been set for 2020, says Connors. Carbon-neutral biomass projects contribute to government meeting both objectives. 
    
The ROR Power focus on B.C. has been based on First Nation initiative in all corners of the province. They have one fully operating run-of-river power generation facility on Brandywine Creek near Whistler with a rated capacity of 7.6 MW. They built close working relationships with First Nations of Squamish and Lil'wat communities. The turn into biomass includes the aforementioned partnerships. The company is presently developing five run-of-river project clusters totaling 639 MW of potential capacity. 
    
The green energy initiatives coming from IPPBC members like ROR Power are "creating opportunities where there are no opportunities to be found otherwise." Furthermore, says Connors, "The use of forestry biomass to create energy is proven technology and forestry byproducts have long been in use for energy production of forestry facilities in B.C.. The projects like Suskwa and Tsilhqot’in are taking energy production values from biomass to a new business level."  

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Vancouver 2010 Olympics security an impressive array

The security budget for the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics ballooned from $84 million to $330 million in the post 9/11 world. In Greece, where 70,000 security persons were on patrol for the 2004 Summer Olympics, the government spent $1.5 billion,  including a ratio of approximately 7:1 in security-to- athletes.
 
Meanwhile in Vancouver the 2010 Winter Olympics security costs will be more than twice the original estimate of $175 million, according to former Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day (the department  now under Hon. Peter Van Loan). Day said in 2007 that the original estimate was “drastically low” and that the cost will be, "more than $400 million but less than $1 billion."
     
The revised estimates made by Day were not surprising considering Canadian security agencies plan to use planes, tanks, ships, and about 13,000 military and police personnel to secure the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games. Despite the massive number, a security network will be working hard to keep a low profile in the midst of half a million visitors.
     
As an example, Canadian Forces personnel and equipment will be apparent only during ceremonial events. Nevertheless the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Games will take place under  the largest security operation ever held in Canada. This massive security force will be managed using an array of surveillance technologies, with closed-circuit cameras, electronic sensors, and unmanned aerial vehicles aloft over Olympic venues in Vancouver and Whistler. 
     
Armed soldiers and helicopters will be present in Vancouver in the background and  overall security  will include RCMP, the military, and other security operatives. These games will feature surveillance  by hundreds of cameras throughout Olympic venues using face-recognition technology.
     
The planning and preparation of Olympic security has been extensive. A three-stage series of exercises occurred at the direction of the 2010 Olympic Integrated Exercise Program, and the last exercise took place from Nov. 2-6, 2009. The three stage program consisted of complementary exercises increasing in scope.
     
Exercise Bronze took place in Nov. 2008, and examined regional safety and security issues. Exercise Silver was held Feb. 2009  and tested safety and security plans, procedures, and coordination. Exercise Gold was a full-scale operational exercise designed to prove that federal, provincial, regional, and municipal organizations stand coordinated and ready to respond to any possible emergency.
     
The exercises provided a realistic environment with mock casualties, and  involved a response from  first responders including police and fire services. Exercise Gold took place in controlled areas and brought together 140 federal, provincial, municipal and private sector organizations to test communication and coordination between the organizations. Everything happened away from the public eye as organizations worked from operational centres.
    
 “As hosts of the 2010 Winter Games, we are committed to providing a safe and secure environment for athletes, visitors and Canadians,” said Hon. Peter Van Loan. “That is why Canada has taken a comprehensive approach to security planning.  We are on track to deliver a safe and secure Games so that what people remember is the celebration and excitement of the competition, not questions of security.”
    
 “In a few short months we will welcome the world to British Columbia as we play host to the 2010 Winter Games,” said Hon. Kash Heed, BC Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General to media at the beginning of November. “Working with our partners in the federal and local governments, we will ensure these Games are safe and secure for all.” 
      
Bud Mercer is Chief Operating Officer of the Vancouver 2010 Integrated Security Unit, who said, “Exercise Gold represented years of planning, integration and preparation with local, provincial, national and international safety and security partners. 2010 will be an historic year for British Columbia and Canada, but the safety and security inter-agency cooperation and relationships will remain in place for years to come."  
      
Police have identified several threats to Olympic security, including anti-globalization, anti-corporate, and First Nations activists, not to mention international extremist organizations like al-Qaida, which already laid down threats to the London 2012 Summer Games. Organized crime remains, however, the highest security risk to the 2010 Games.
      
The ISU identified a number of domestic and international threats, including the nation's engagement in Afghanistan, which has put a different light on Canada in the international community, causing al-Qaida to warn Canada to withdraw from Afghanistan or risk attacks similar to 9/11 and bombings in London and Madrid.
      
Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) linked vandalism against sponsors like Royal Bank Canada to protests against the Games. CSIS also noted a group called the Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement has toured North America to stir protests against the Vancouver games.“I think you get a very definite sense that (Vancouver's Olympics are) a likely target,” said David Harris, a former CSIS officer who is director of international and terrorist intelligence programs at Insignis Strategic Research.
      
To buttress security options in October 2009, the provincial government gave host municipalities (Richmond, Vancouver, and Whistler) the power to enter residences between Feb. 1 and Mar. 31, 2010, to seize signs considered "anti-olympic." A further amendment gave Vancouver the power to fine up to $10,000 and imprisonment up to six months for sign and bylaw violations.
      
The reasons for opposition include security expenses to taxpayers (said in 2008 to be $580 million), and possible losses to be incurred including debt in the Olympic Village development, which was supposed to be profitable but is possibly running in the red to the tune of millions.
      
Opponents cite destruction of environment, loss of affordable housing, and use of the Olympics to force a $2 billion rapid transit link from Downtown Vancouver to the airport. Opposition to the Olympics is found amongst First Nations people and their supporters. 
     
The federal government will cover the cost of security at the border, at Vancouver International Airport,  and for international VIPs, while the B.C. government and federal government will split the cost of security for Olympic venues.
     
A First Nation security company called T’musta7 Aboriginal Protection Services will  provide security services to the Resort Municipality of Whistler and to other businesses, including Crown Corporations, during 2010 Winter Games. Owner Lyle Leo of Mt. Currie First Nation is focused on the Sea-to-Sky area. “We are looking at 100 pairs of boots on the ground within the next two or three months,” said Leo. 
     
“We are closer than ever to operational status since clarifying and renewing business relations. We had to rethink our plans after VANOC rejected our bid for services directly related to the 2010 Olympics,” he explained, but Leo remained firm in his resolve. “We were the only Aboriginal group prepared with troops on the ground,” he said, “and to be honest, it was quite disappointing to be rejected by VANOC.” 
      
T’Musta7 reassessed in order to create a sustainable long-term opportunity as a sub-contractor, and has recruited security personnel to  establish their preparedness by securing public events like music festivals in Whistler and a 4x4 rally at Pemberton. 
      
Leo  recruited First Nation personnel exclusively and was joined by Chief Don Harris of Douglas First Nation, who is, according to Leo, “making a lot of headway for Aboriginal community economic development since partnering in run-of-river projects. They want to take part with organizing opportunities for First Nations with the 2010 Winter Games.
    
 “Chief Harris is tuned in with changes in the Aboriginal community with his participation with the election of National Chief Shawn Atleo and the opening of the Osoyoos Business Centre, Leo has applied for security services contracts through Crown Corporation Procurement processes. 
     
Chief Harris said of T’Musta7, “We are recruiting in the Lower Mainland where Douglas First Nation has a lot of members. I am working onpolitical agreements with INAC to get people trained for employment. Lyle has contracts and we had 40-hour training program start with up to 20 more recruits.”\

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Decadent forests in B.C. are failing to sequester carbon

Matt Mercer is a New Brunswick-born forestry professional who migrated to Vancouver Island where he works in forestry management consulting and raises a young family. Matt has been studying the forestry biomass file for the company he works for in Campbell River, B.C., Zimmfor Management Services Ltd., a consulting company of resource sector professionals that operates world-wide, including South America, Asia, USA, and Canada. 
     
Biomass has become a big file in on a world-wide scale and B.C. offers substantial opportunities in these emerging green-oriented (carbon neutral) forestry business practices. "We have quite a few clients in wood-products manufacturing and they are inquiring about regulatory changes from the B.C. government energy plan (of 2007)," says Mercer. 
     
"The plan outlines the energy strategies for the next few years with the goal of energy self-sufficiency by 2016," he says. Government policy has been undertaken to meet these energy goals, and institutional frameworks like the B.C. BioEnergy Network have been allocated funding to encourage development of research in nine basic streams of energy production from renewable or reusable resources. 
     
Canadians are behind parts of Europe where most facets of resource potential are exploited, including cities doing energy production from forest waste products found in Canadian sawmills and turned into wood pellets. Mercer says federal policies in Canada favour reduction of 'carbon intensities,' and part of B.C.'s energy policy reflects that strategy. 
     
"The federal government says that suppliers must reduce carbon intensities by 20 percent between 2010 and 2020." Suppliers with carbon-based energy output are looking at research into celulosic-based ethynol (alcohol fuel derived from wood waste), which, "emits smaller carbon intensity than other ethynols."  
     
And, he notes, "Co-generation is not uncommon in the forestry sector, with pulp mills recycling biomass into hog fuel to power their facilities. Mercer says the Zimmfor approach to biomass potential looks at both sides of the equation, from the points of view of both wood product manufacturer and fibre supplier. One informative source to follow is the BC Forestry Climate Change Working Group of pulp and paper, saw-milling, and forestry sectors.  
     
Decadent forests in B.C. are failing to sequester carbon due to mountain pine beetle devastation and other issues. These forests are under examination in Request For Power calls and Request For Qualification research proposals, and these forests stand to be harvested intensively for biomass, with high-priority silviculture operations to follow. 
     
"The forestry sector is looking at carbon-offset programs related to fertilization of forests, use of seed-stock to make better carbon-sequestering trees, and aforestation policies to plant new forests," says Mercer.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Security firm wants 10,000 boots on the job

Don Allen runs United Protection Services Inc. in Edmonton, Alberta,  where they have had a First Nation division for the past 12 years. "It's our fastest growing division and we have a partnership with United First Nations Corps., owned by Earl John," says Allen, "It's looking very good for United First Nations Corp. with their new contract to provide security services on oil sands construction sites north of Ft. McMurray. It's a 100 percent Aboriginal security service that will have 200 employees working in Alberta.
     
"In B.C. we bought North Star Patrol 4 1/2 years ago and Ken Robertson remained with United. It was Ken who put the deal together with Lyle Leo at T'Musta7 Aboriginal Security Services Inc.," Allen says, "Ken is our business development manager in B.C. and he's a specialist in short-term contracts. We do events in the Resort Municipality of Whistler and with businesses doing special events for everything from business conferences to beer gardens. We know that for the next few months there is a big push to work in security in the Lower Mainland. Our goal is continue procuring other long term contracts."
     
United Protection Services Inc. has employees in B.C., Alberta, and Saskatchewan, "and 20 percent of our workforce is First Nation and Aboriginal employees." Allen notes, "I am President of Security Officer Career College and Tom Hill is the General Manager. Tom delivers programs to communities that educate about crime to ensure a safe community. Some of these programs are employment oriented, and certificates of Completion issue from the Security Officer Career College.
     
SOCC is holding a national Aboriginal security services a conference at the River Cree Casino in Edmonton Feb. 10, 2010. "We intend to create empowerment for First Nation communities right across the country. We have a long term goal to help First Nation and Aboriginal groups to reshape the face of security services in Canada. The training services of the college are being promoted with all levels of government including INAC, and the course delivery is based entirely on reaching out to communities. We don't have a campus. We take the program all over Alberta, and we are expanding in B.C. and Saskatchewan."
     
The SOCC is working with various industries to provide the Aboriginal presence in security at places like First Nation owned and operated casinos in Canada. "River Cree Casino in Edmonton has 10 percent Aboriginal employment and we can improve it with trained personnel in security and other training like housekeeping services." Allen has been providing security services in one capacity or another for 33 years. He explains, "Initially I started the school and soon I branched into the security business itself. A couple of years later I was going out and providing security services with the people we trained." He instituted better training and built his human resources out places like Hobbema and other large First Nation communities in central and southern Alberta. "These jobs give people long term skills and good points on a resume for future employment." 
     
Earl John has spent 10 years building the United First Nation Corp. Presently, "We are trying to find partnerships that will work with us on the east coast, in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland in particular. We have operations in B.C. and Alberta and we are expanding into Saskatchewan," says John. "We want to go further east, both in Manitoba and Northern Ontario as well as the east coast." He says the core of his all-Aboriginal security service has been recruited out of Alberta. "We've hired from all across Alberta as far south as Sun Child and Stoney Creek and we have recruited successfully from the Chipewyan Prairie First Nation, the Conklin Metis, others have been recruited from Big Horn, O'Chiese, Sampson, Louis Bull, Erminskin and Montana Bands at Hobbema."
     
John says, "We have 160 trained and we will have double that by next year," and he notes the size of the corp. has been doubled over the past year. "We benefit from Tom Hill's six week training course delivered into communities and we are putting it in B.C. with the BC Justice Institute for compliance with Olympic standards. We are looking at partnerships to fulfill long term commitments to provide security services to industries like wood, rail, oil and gas, pipeline, and other transport sectors. We want to run contracts to secure new construction projects. We are working with Douglas First Nation's Chief Don Harris to provide training and employment to Lower Mainland First Nation personnel."
    
 John is proud of the company's Ft. McMurray contracts, "They're our bread and butter in security operations and its a win-win-win situation for everybody when United First Nation Corp. Inc. obtained the contract. It brings training and employment dollars to First Nation families who live on reserves where they need the incomes; it brings joint venture opportunities to First Nation entrepreneurs, and the client gets security services that are trained well beyond industry standards." He says personnel receive the basic security guard training plus conflict resolution management, safety sessions, defensive driving lessons, and life skills. "Plus they receive one week of on-the-job training for the work experience."
     
These security jobs outside Ft. McMurray come with more than fringe benefits. "These oil camps are well done operations, supplying all the amenities like weight training rooms, satellite TV, internet service, individual rooms with bathrooms, these are PTI Group camps that run like permanent long-established operations through the construction cycle all the way into industrial operations. Having a First Nation presence in these 3,500 man camp operations is our goal." Ultimately United First Nation Corp. is working toward a national goal of 10,000 pairs of Aboriginal boots on the ground.