Manitoba officially begins use of biodiesel
Premier Greg Selinger said today at Speedway International, a Manitoba biodiesel processing facility, “This mandate is one of the building blocks of our clean energy plan, an important climate-change initiative that will see the reduction of greenhouse-gas emissions in Manitoba”. “As a result of the two per cent biodiesel blend with diesel, it is expected greenhouse-gas emissions will be reduced by 56,000 tonnes or the equivalent of removing more than 11,000 cars from the road annually.”
Requiring a biodiesel blend in diesel fuel sold in Manitoba builds on a previously announced regulation in 2008 requiring the licensing of biodiesel manufacturers and the adoption of fuel quality standards in an effort to ensure the integrity of the province’s fuel supply.
Part of the mandate will provide support for local biodiesel production by replacing the current fuel tax exemption with a 14-cent-per-litre, five-year production grant for biodiesel produced in Manitoba.
While biodiesel became government mandated on Nov. 1, biodiesel is already being used in Manitoba by some vehicle fleets, such as Manitoba Hydro, Winnipeg School Division and Canada Safeway. It is expected biodiesel will be widely available to consumers by summer 2010.
The trucking community however, is still sceptical about the actual amount of biodiesel that will be in diesel fuel at the pump.
One common misconception regarding the rule is that fuel retailers will be required to sell biodiesel directly at the pump. As is the case in B.C., which is likely kicking-off its B5 mandate in January 2010, fuel companies need only to produce a provincial “pool average” of B2.
For more information on biodiesel visit www.gov.mb.ca/stem/energy/biofuels/biodiesel/.
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