Travel

March 08, 2007

Tiverton Ontario, energy hotspot!

 

Tiverton_map Located halfway up the Bruce Peninsula, not far from the eastern shores of Lake Huron, Tiverton Ontario is smack in the center of ‘cow country.’ The lush fields and green pastures of Bruce County really do belong to the cows – there are over 163,000 of them living on 3,750 farms. In fact Bruce County is ranked number one in the entire province for cattle; it produces 7.6 per cent of Ontario’s beef and over 80,000 kilograms of milk per year. That’s probably because over 62 per cent of the county is farmed and the soil here is some of the best in the world.

Tiver_1878_streetmap But it wasn’t always like this. Almost every farmer growing crops today had a grandfather or a great grandfather that worked very hard to clear the family plot.


Nothing but unbroken forest greeted Timothy Allan when he first settled in Tiverton in the fall of 1850. He was the first European settler to discover the quality of the soil. After years of back-breaking labour he cleared himself a sizable piece of land and set an example for the other pioneers that followed. In 1857 Norman McInnes opened a general store in what was then called St Andrews. When Canada Post came along in 1860 they changed the town’s name to Tiverton because there was already a St. Andrews in Nova  Scotia.


Tiverton1900 Tiverton thrived from the beginning, McInnes, the storekeeper and postmaster, started a pot and pearl-ash factory in his back yard. For people who don’t know what this is, potash is an impure form of potassium carbonate (K2CO3) mixed with other potassium salts. Potash is made by collecting and boiling the ashes of hardwood trees. Pearl ash is created by cooking and further refining the potash. The first patent ever issued by the U.S. Patent Office was awarded to Samuel Hopkins in 1790 for an improved method of making pearl ash. Today this industry is almost completely obsolete, but 150 years ago pearl ash had a myriad of uses, including the manufacture of soap and glass. Its principle application was as a detergent for cleaning raw wool – consequently England imported it by the boat load.

McInnis certainly prospered from the settlers burning trees around Tiverton in the 1870’s, and the domestic wool trade fed a healthy demand for pearl ash. Historical records show that Norman McInnes helped finance nearby saw mills and a grist mill, and his money even helped set up a grain market for local farmers. To this day, the McInnes name still appears on the mailboxes of the largest farms in the area.


Inbrief_bruce With agriculture so prevalent in Tiverton, it’s rather surprising the town has become famous for something else – energy. By some strange coincidence, this small community has become a huge energy hotspot. There are three distinctly different energy production centers located in and around the municipality.

Bruce Station is the largest nuclear facility in Canada with eight CANDU reactors and a total output of 6,232 net megawatts (MW). When construction began in 1970 it must have put Tiverton on the map – the map of enemy targets at which the Soviet Union aimed long range ballistic missiles! Thank god the Cold War is over.

Windmill Ontario's first commercial wind farm, called Huron Wind is also located near Tiverton. The wind farm consists of five 1.8 MW wind turbines that supply enough electricity to power 3,000 homes on an annual basis. Monitored remotely, the turbines spin approximately 95 per cent of the time, producing variable amounts of electricity in correspondence with the power of the wind. The turbines are 107 meters tall from ground to blade peak.

Tiverton Ontario also boasts an ethanol plant that has been fermenting corn and distilling ethyl alcohol here since 1989. GreenField Ethanol produces 26 million litres of fuel ethanol and industrial grade alcohol at the Tiverton facility every year. Tiverton is a batch processing plant, where corn is processed in ‘batches’, and is also where GreenField Ethanol conducts Canadian-leading ethanol research and development.

While ethanol appears in the press a lot lately due to its many benefits as a sustainable fuel, few people realize the tremendously positive impact on the local economies around the plants themselves. An average-sized ethanol production plant like the one at Tiverton employs about 40 people with good-paying, high-skill jobs and provides spin-off jobs through local providers of goods and services. More than 70 per cent of revenue from an ethanol plant is spent within a 150-km radius of the site. Local people are employed. Local crops are purchased to make the ethanol, and the local tax base is significantly expanded. Farmers also benefit from reduced transportation costs.

Tivplan For example, GreenField Ethanol plant managers buy local corn and send wet distillers grains back to the feedlots in and around the area. Remember those 163,000 cows? That means there will always be a demand for distillers’ grains in Bruce County.

Back in the autumn of 1850, Timothy Allen couldn’t have guessed that he was clearing one of Canada’s foremost energy hotspots.