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The Rural Voice, 1987-05, Page 30Spring Planting Time is H0' -e STECKLE'S HURON RIDGE ACRES Providing Friendly Service with Quality Products • Shade Trees • Evergreen Shrubs • Flowering Shrubs • Potted Rose Bushes • Fruit Trees & Fruit Bushes • Perennial Plants ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF HOMEGROWN BEDDING PLANTS IN HURON COUNTY David & Carol Steckle & Family R.R. 2, Zurich 565-2122 Open Weekdays to 9 p.m. Sat. 'til 5 p.m. During May — Sun. 1:30 to 5 p.m. 28 THE RURAL VOICE NEWS SO-CALLED "BLACK" WHEAT VARIETY IS BEING GROWN FOR PLANNED BRUCE ETHANOL PLANT At a recent meeting of the Huron Federation of Agriculture, some far- mers expressed concern about a rumour that a large land -holding company had imported a variety of "black" wheat. "Black" wheat, according to the rumour, is used in the dark European breads, and if put on the market could downgrade Canadian milling wheat and damage Ontario wheat exports. Ross Addemas, general manager of the Ontario Wheat Producers Market- ing Board, which markets all wheat grown in Ontario, says the board has been aware of the rumour but had no knowledge of any unregistered varieties of wheat. The board had asked Agriculture Canada for information, he says, but had not received a reply. Companies seeking to register a variety, Addemas says, would have to submit test data to the Standards Committee of Agriculture Canada to determine if yield, disease, lodging, sprouting, milling, and baking quality met the standards for Ontario wheat. brought into Canada without the approval of Agriculture Canada." Agriculture Canada, which licenses wheat varieties for specific uses, is aware of the Adam acreage and will continue to monitor the crop, says Tom Hoddson, program co-ordinator of the Seed Division of the Food Pro- duction Branch of Agriculture Canada. "A company has received authorization to import and plant a non -registered variety of wheat and to distribute, continue to produce, export, feed, or use it for industrial purposes," he adds. The Adam wheat, says Helmut Sieber, is being produced experimen- tally for possible use in a pilot ethanol - production plant proposed for the Bruce Energy Station. The plant is now at the design stage. Adam is a high -protein, high - yielding variety that has the potential to yield 100 bushels per acre with up to 18 per cent protein. In addition to Adam, Sieber says, Canadian Agra has extensive test plots of other varieties WHAT IS ETHANOL? Ethanol, or grain alcohol, can be produced with sugars from fruits and sugar canes, but more often the starches of grains are converted to sugars by enzymes. Those sugars are then fermented, a process which produces the alcohol found in bever- ages as well as in ethanol. Grain alcohol, however, has been put to industrial use. In recent years, the tetraethyl lead component of high- octane gasoline has been judged a damaging pollutant, and efforts are underway to eliminate it from fuels. Grain alcohol or ethanol is chemically similar and is being used more and more as a replacement for tetraethyl lead. With minor engine adjustments, ethanol can even be used alone as a motor fuel. Denatured alcohol is also grain alcohol to which another substance has been added to make it undrinkable or to adapt it to industrial uses.0 The milling quality of wheat is specific to variety; a good bread wheat, for example, would make a poor pastry flour, and an untested variety mixed in could ruin either. It turns out, in fact, that there is between 2,500 to 2,800 acres of an imported red winter wheat called Adam being grown by Canadian Agra, a Wingham-based company with exten- sive land holdings and interests in several other agriculture -related busi- nesses. But as Helmut Sieber, presi- dent of Canadian Agra, notes, "Not even one little packet of seed has been of wheat in order to assess their value for the proposed ethanol plant. Until Adam is licensed, Sieber added, it will be grown only on Canadian Agra land by company per- sonnel. When the ethanol plant near the Bruce nuclear plant is in produc- tion and the wheat is licensed, the company will seek contract growers. Until then, the crop will be stored. According to Sieber, a plant pro- ducing only ethanol is not profitable, but by extracting high quality protein as well, such a plant is quite feasible. (cont'd)