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The Rural Voice, 2001-07, Page 10Perth County Plowing Match i will be held at the farm of David Carson east of Listowel on Line 86, 91 1# 5515 on AUGUST 18, 2001 tplease note this date is earlier than usual) For more information call 345-2827 PARTS & EQUIPMENT - NEW & USED R.R. #2, Teeswater, Ontario NOG 2S0 Phone 519-392-6111 Fax 519-392-8099 TRACTORS MMG 1000 S3.500. AC D 19 gas S3,500. MM Jet Star w/loader 53.500. Belaris 520A 4 WD. w/loader S6,500. Oliver 88 standard (mint) 53,500. JD 2120 w/loader 59,500. Case 700 new paint 54.000. Farmall Super M 52,500. Case 1175 510.000. DB 1200 Mechanics special S2,000. McCormick W 30 52.500. Cockshutt 1850 gas S4.000. 1950 Dodge 1 ton w/hoist, nice 52.500. AC D 14 53,500. White 2-85 510.000. MISCELLANEOUS NI 5109 haybine S6,000. JD 35 harvester 52.000. NI 483 baler, excellent 56.000. Olivi rake S3.250. New Holland 46 trail mower S250. Owattona haybine S750. New Douglas 6' finishing mower .. 51,775. Duck Enterprises dump trailer... S2,300. Several 4 & 6 row corn scufflers from . 5400. Versatile 400 12' swather S2,500. NH 707 harvester 2 heads 51.000. JD 24T baler 5900. WRECKING Many makes of haybines, harvesters, swathers, forage racks. balers & Case IH 8575 big square baler. JUST IN FOR WRECKING: JD 6400, 7400. 8200, 8400 all w/4 WD Styre 8160 Wanted tractors & equipment for salvage and resale 6 THE RURAL VOICE Robert Mercer The church and climate change I am not in favour of the Church taking political stands. I would rather see the complete separation of the Church from the state. But at times. and in certain cases. the Church can effect progressive change. Today. the religious community has. more than any other group. worldwide and long term established interests. It has presence in developing countries, those developed and in third world countries. The Church community is organized and active globally. The problem of climate change is also global. The atmosphere is a global commons. It belongs to no one. It is to be shared by everyone. Because of human activity we are causing our one and only climate to change. We are fouling our air and threatening the long term stability of world civilization. Earlier this year the world religious leaders started to engage in the issue publically. The last co- ordinated effort in this type arena of global justice was for relief of third world debt which the churches brought before the G-7 nations successfully. ' The World Council of Churches has set up the Inter -Church Committee on Ecology. A main objective is to get the wealthier countries, who have higher per capita emission levels of CO2, to live up to their moral responsibilities to cut those emissions by reductions, and not by trading their obligations away and leaving this planet as smoggy as ever. I attended one of the local Church -sponsored workshops on climate change organized through an ecumenical project that was educationally -based and promoted actionby the individuals in their own lifestyles. There were excellent handout materials, government position papers, backgrounders and a copy of a letter sent to U.S. president George Bush from the U.S. religious leaders objecting to the U.S. withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol in March. In part. I was interested to find if there was any information in the handout package on the benetits of ethanol as a method of reducing CO2 emissions. I was only able to see one reference to the Iogen Corp. work with Petro Canada to produce ethanol .from agricultural residues. It seems our government has not yet fully embraced the benefits of ethanol in its approach to the climate change debate. It may seem strange to write about a religious movement to tackle the needed momentum in the climate debate, but my view is that it can help motivate the ground swell required to force political global action. The changes needed are costly, but inaction is costly too. I am fully convinced that the Kyoto protocol is a start in the right direction, that emission reductions must start to be made now, and that start must be made in North America. If a workshop of this kind comes to your community there are two reasons for at least one family member to go. One, to present facts. that will inform others about ethanol and its role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GHG). The other reason is to support this movement and to learn from it. When one litre of ethanol replaces one litre of gasoline there is a 39 per cent reduction in GHG emissions.0 Robert Mercer was editor of the Broadwater Market Letter and a farm commentator in Ontario for 25 years.