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Funding Renewed for Grain Bag Recycling Program

Federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz and Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart announced $100,000 to extend the Grain Bag Recycling Pilot Project in 2014. The program includes recycling for both grain bags and twine.

"The high level of farmer participation in this project demonstrates the importance of responsibly disposing grain bags," said Minister Ritz. "Our Government is proud to continue to partner with the Government of Saskatchewan to support this program for producers."

“We are pleased to extend the Grain Bag Recycling Pilot Project until a permanent program is implemented,” Stewart said. “With increasing use of grain bags to store the record crop from last year’s harvest, we want farmers to continue to have an option to responsibly dispose of their bags.”

The Grain Bag Recycling Pilot Project was first implemented in March 2011. Since inception approximately 325,800 kg of plastic (2,172 bags) and 6,600 kg of twine has been recycled. The Ministry of Environment is currently working on the creation of regulations that will form the basis for an industry-led permanent recycling program for 2015. The Grain Bag Recycling Pilot Project is administered by Simply Agriculture Solutions Inc. (formerly the Provincial Council of Agriculture Development and Diversification Boards, or PCAB) and funded through the federal-provincial Growing Forward 2 framework.

“Simply Agriculture Solutions looks forward to continuing to provide an environmentally responsible solution for the disposal of the grain bags and twine and working with producers across the province as we incorporate additional plastics (silage plastic and net wrap) into the pilot program,” Agricultural Plastic Recycling Co-ordinator Travis Quirk said.

Farmers and ranchers can access collection sites across the province in Cudworth, Hirsch, Humboldt, Kelvington, Macoun, Mankota (twine only), Milestone, Moose Jaw, Mossbank, Oungre, Prince Albert, Rush Lake, Unity and Viscount.

If recycling is not an option, producers should check with their nearest landfill to see if they take used grain bags.

Source: Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada


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