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New Weyburn plant will turn flax waste into fibre and pellets

New Weyburn plant will turn flax waste into fibre and pellets
May 06, 2025
By Jean-Paul McDonald
Assistant Editor, North American Content, Farms.com

Prairie Clean to Open Flax Straw Facility Weyburn

Prairie Clean Enterprises (PCE), a clean-tech company based in Saskatchewan, is expanding its operations to Weyburn by opening the world’s first facility that processes flax straw into two valuable products — industrial-grade fibre and premium pellets.  

This project highlights innovation in agriculture and brings significant economic benefits to the rural community.  PCE recently met with the mayor and city council to provide an overview of the plans. 

The new facility is located at 54 Queen Street, Weyburn. Construction for upgrades will begin this month (May 2025), with machinery arriving in August and full production planned for September. When the facility is fully operational, it will create over 30 full-time jobs and add more than $3 million annually in wages to the local economy. In addition, it will lead to many indirect jobs in areas like trucking, straw baling, and field logistics. 

PCE has already bought 16,000 tonnes of flax straw over the past two years and plans to purchase 30,000 tonnes more from the 2025 harvest. This means new income opportunities for farmers who can now sell what was once a leftover product. 

“Weyburn is the perfect home for our flagship facility,” said Mark Cooper, President and CEO of PCE. “We’re honoured to be partnering with the city, its people, and local farmers to bring this project to life…and to show the world what Saskatchewan can do when innovation meets agriculture.” 

The company has secured a steady supply of raw materials, ordered equipment, and confirmed demand for its products. Now in the final stage of raising capital, Prairie Clean aims to make Weyburn a hub of sustainable and innovative manufacturing. This facility will not only help the environment by reducing waste but also support local communities through job creation and new farming contracts. 

PCE’s project sets an example of how rural areas can lead in clean, value-added agriculture. 

Photo Credit: Weyburn-Prairie Clean-Meeting


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A chain harrow is a game changer

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Utilizing a rotational grazing method on our farmstead with our sheep helps to let the pasture/paddocks rest. We also just invested in a chain harrow to allow us to drag the paddocks our sheep just left to break up and spread their manure around, dethatch thicker grass areas, and to rough up bare dirt areas to all for a better seed to soil contact if we overseed that paddock. This was our first time really using the chain harrow besides initially testing it out. We are very impressed with the work it did and how and area that was majority dirt, could be roughed up before reseeding.

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