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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Stirling Hemp Company Gets $2 Million To Open Plant
Title:CN ON: Stirling Hemp Company Gets $2 Million To Open Plant
Published On:2009-01-23
Source:Intelligencer, The (CN ON)
Fetched On:2009-01-24 19:25:42
STIRLING HEMP COMPANY GETS $2 MILLION TO OPEN PLANT

Stonehedge Bio-Resources Inc.

Stirling research scientist John Baker has spent a decade growing
and testing varieties of hemp.

He's now taken a giant step toward producing industrial hemp for the
global marketplace.

The founder and president of Stonehedge Bio- Resources Inc. was in
Toronto Wednesday to secure $2 million from private investors to
open the first North American bio-processing plant for industrial
hemp by this time next year.

Baker has received three letters of intent to invest more than $2
million from Lime Technology Ltd. in the United Kingdom, American
Lime Technology in the United States and another private UK
investor. Also attending the ceremony and news con-f erence were
John Wilkinson, minister of research and innovation and
Northumberland- West MPP Lou Rinaldi.

"I am delighted to accept these letters of intent on behalf of my
company," Baker said. "We have a vision to make Stonehedge the
leader in industrial hemp in North America and today we are one step closer."

Baker said the investment will allow him to hire five employees this
year and employ up to 27 people by 2011, as well as creating new
opportunities for up to 200 farmers.

He plans to open a biorefining facility along the Highway 41
corridor between Oshawa and Belleville that would produce Hemcrete,
an environmentally-friendly limestone building material similar to concrete.

The company also expects to produce more than $17 million per year
in renewable hemp fibre, woodlike chips, pellets, matting and seed products.

"These bio-based products signify the future of sustainable
development and clean green technology by replacing products that
cause serious environmental damage with innovative carbon-negative
alternatives," he told The Intelligencer in a telephone interview
from a Toronto hotel.

Industrial hemp has been grown for thousands of years to make fibre
for clothing, furniture, ropes, sails and more.

Baker said that as an agricultural crop, hemp is beneficial -- it
can be readily grown organically as it does not require the use of
harsh chemical herbicides, pesticides and defoliants as do many
other fibre crops.

Baker and his wife, Christine, have owned and operated Stonehedge
Kennels and horse breeding farm on Eggleton Road southeast of
Stirling for the past 25 years. Their 50-acre farm is located almost
next door to their daughter, Beth Bouma, who has 80 acres.

Baker said he's spent the past 10 years growing, testing and coming
up with his own varieties of hemp and is now looking to
industrialize it for the marketplace.

He said the Quinte area and Northumberland region provides an ideal
soil/climate resource on which to develop the hemp biomass sector.

As well, he said the regions' proximity to the Quebec-Ontario market
corridor and the eastern seaboard of the United States provides an
additional competitive advantage.

Baker said he will need at least 17,000 acres of land to produce
hemp. He plans on contracting hemp production to growers along the
401 corridor.

"This will be an opportunity for Northumberland, Hastings and Prince
Edward and Lennox and Addington farmers to grow seeds that we need
to plant acreage," he said.

Baker said he believes growing hemp can be as profitable as other crops.

"It's a great opportunity and our farming community can gauge on
this . but it will take some patience on everyone's part."

He is now looking for a location for the bio-refining facility for
hemp, adding that it will have to be along the 401 corridor, central
to where the hemp is grown.

"We hope to be ordering equipment in three months and start
production 12 to 15 months from today," Baker said. "We will have to
contract some acreage this year in anticipation of the plant being
up in 12 months."

He added the success of the operation may mean adding additional
bio-refining facilities in the future.

"The whole project will be in the neighbourhood of $20 million,"
Baker said. "This $2-million private investment is a giant step ahead."

He said the possibilities are endless, considering that the global
renewable and bioproducts industry is expected to exceed $125
billion in revenues by 2010.

Baker credits several organizations for contributing to his success,
including the Trenval Business Development Corporation,
Northumberland Community Futures Development Corporation and the
Easter Lake Ontario Innovation Network.

Gerrit DeBruyn, Trenval's executive director, accompanied Baker to
Toronto Wednesday and said the investment is like a dream come true.

"Trenval had been working with John probably seven years or so ago
when he had this dream of utilizing hemp in various products and we
have been supporting his mission by providing him some funding ...
we're delighted today that after years of patience and perseverance
on John's part that we're able to see a major breakthrough here," he said.

DeBruyn said Trenval will assist Baker in taking the next step in
opening his bio-refining facility.

"It's green energy and obviously we're very supportive of that," he said.
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