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The Rural Voice, 2019-06, Page 34 Plus, he loves the circular concept of making the most of the farm’s resources. Not only does the farm manure and organic waste create energy, it also creates a rich fertilizer for spreading on crop yields. “It’s value added ... you get more out of what you produce,” says Dave. So while farmers wait for future funding to encourage and promote the greater use of renewable energy sources, learning from the process at Greenholm Farms can prepare them if/when that funding appears. Gord and Dave Green milk 250 Holstein cattle at the sixth generation dairy farm and it’s a busy place. Off-shore workers are cleaning in the dairy barn while Dave hauls tankers of liquid manure and Gord walks in with his barn clothes, clearly busy as well. Trucks roll in, bringing in a variety of materials including soluble corn distillers (discarded because of high levels of DOM), off-spec milk, grease trap waste, surplus whey, apple waste (cores, peels and pulp) and potatoes to feed the biodigesters. It’s a bit of a muddy mess with this wet spring weather and there is finishing work to be done after the second digester was installed in 2018. Before installing both digesters, the Greens researched how much the the hydro component would cost. Digesters sized 200 kw and above need to hook into a three-phase circuit and they aren’t available everywhere. The closest one to the Green farm was on the next concession which, luckily, the farm could reach through its own fields. They installed the lines themselves. That saved a LOT of money as connecting the digesters to a three- phase circuit can cost up to $200,000 per kilometre. “There’s always lots of interest in biodigesters but a lot of people get stopped because they don’t have access to a three-phase circuit,” said Dave. 30 The Rural Voice Engines (right) generate a lot of heat in the two anerobic biodigestors (bottom) at Greenholm Farms owned by Gord Green and son Dave Green (middle) who was spreading liquid manure the day of this interview.