Day 44


Today's Photos
from the Road

Adventure Traveler Garry Sowerby in his own words:

Tuesday, September 28
Winnipeg, Killarney and Boissevain, Manitoba


Environmental Initiative #53
New Flyer Industries, Winnipeg, Manitoba

How often do you get to do something that you've never done before? Most days, it's 'same old, same old', but today.

Today, I did something I've wanted to try for a long time but I'd never done before.

I drove a bus.

And not just any bus. I drove a New Flyer 60-foot (18.5 m) hybrid diesel-electric bus. I got to close the door. I got to open the door. I even had a few passengers. Mind you, I couldn't leave the parking lot because I don't have the proper license but hey! I still drove a bus.

I had the same feeling as when I switched from training on DC-3 airplanes to jets during my military years. Where did all the noise go? You'd think driving a bus would be noisy. But this hybrid bus is sleek and quiet. I wanted to know if we could take it across the country to continue the Mission Green tour.

John Marinucci, President and CEO, and Amy Miller, Director of Marketing and Product Development of New Flyer showed the Mission Green team through the clean, impressive facility here in Winnipeg.

New Flyer has a long history of innovation in the bus and coach industry that dates back to 1930, when the company started as Western Auto and Truck Body Works Limited. Since then it has grown to include five facilities in Canada and the US.

The company has been on the leading edge of the environmental transit movement. New Flyer has the widest selection of heavy-duty hybrid-electric transit vehicles available, with diesel-electric 40-foot (12 m) and 60-foot (18.5 m) vehicles and a gasoline-electric hybrid transit bus. The company introduced the first heavy-duty, hybrid-electric transit vehicle in 1999 to Orange County in California. 

Hybrid power buses (diesel and gasoline) are the building blocks to support transit agencies in reducing harmful emissions of particulate, NOx and Green House Gases (GHG) without sacrificing operational performance or making a significant investment in alternative gaseous fuel infrastructure.

Efficient operation and power management of electric hybrids mirror the future zero emissions vehicle technologies of hydrogen and fuel cell propulsion systems.

Other benefits include: better fuel economy, enhanced acceleration (to enter traffic lanes), shiftless drivetrain (comfortable ride for drivers and riders), and reduced maintenance (longer life on mechanical components such as brake linings and fuel injectors).

As we rode around Winnipeg, I sat in the back of the bus and tried to imagine what this bus would go through in its lifetime. I tried to visualize this brand new bus, still with protective paper on the floor, filled with passengers. Which route would it be working? Who will have the seat I was in as their favourite seat?

How would you get the word out to the public that the bus they were riding in was this incredible green machine, significantly lowering greenhouse gas emissions?

This one was easy to answer: The best advertisement for these buses is themselves. There's no puff of exhaust that spews from the pipe, the bus is quiet, there's no smell. Everyday you have a limitless captive audience. It's the perfect word of mouth scenario.

It was fitting that Bryan Swift, Director of Environmental Activities for General Motors of Canada, had joined the team today to tour the New Flyer facility. It has only been five days since the announcement that BC Transit will be the first transit system in Canada to buy New Flyer buses equipped with GM's advanced hybrid diesel-electric system.

It's part of GM's environmental vision to start at the other end of the spectrum when it comes to reducing GHG emissions by applying hybrids to larger vehicles to have a bigger impact and save more fuel.

These buses, like the bus we were riding now, improve fuel economy by up to 60% and reduce particulate, hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions by up to 90 percent and nitrous oxide emissions are reduced up to 50 percent when compared to a conventional diesel, while providing a 50 percent improvement in acceleration.

As I stepped out of the bus, I realized that I had been riding one of the actual vehicles that is part of the fleet of 235 hybrid buses that Seattle, Washington has ordered, the largest transit hybrid order in history. It was already sporting the city's transit colours.

It's a trend that is growing and makes perfect sense when you consider that if the 13,000 transit buses in service in the nine largest U.S. cities were replaced with New Flyer buses featuring GM's hybrid technology, the U.S. would use nearly 40 million fewer gallons of diesel fuel each year. That's the equivalent fuel savings of 584,000 small hybrid cars!

In Canada it would take fewer than 150 hybrid buses or about 1% of all the urban transit buses operating in the country today to exceed the fuel saved by all the hybrid cars that have been sold here to date.

Mission Green would like to salute the 1900 bus builders of New Flyer who have shared in bringing the dream of hybrid and alternate fuel vehicles to reality but who have also acted to ensure that the company as a whole practices environmental manufacturing processes.

http://www.newflyer.com/

http://www.gm.com/company/gmability/adv_tech/100_news/index.html
You are now leaving the mission green website to an external website.

 

Environmental Initiative #54
Turtle Mountain Sustainable Ventures, Killarney, Manitoba

A beautiful sun-filled day with a breeze rippling the grasses that stretched as far as the eye could see seemed the perfect backdrop for our whirlwind tour of this tucked-away corner of Manitoba.

People from the towns of Killarney, Boissevain, the regional municipalities of Turtle Mountain, Morton, Whitewater and Riverside had come to Killarney today to talk to Mission Green about some of their visionary ideas about their future.

Almost every initiative we have saluted to date has made us think about the Big Picture. We're not just here on the planet to live and then move on. There is a legacy that we'll be leaving to future generations. And the state of that legacy is completely up to us. It's in our control.

The people involved in each of the initiatives we've visited on the Mission Green tour have had a belief in that control. Each initiative has been about people considering the Big Picture, the Future and the Legacy.

Today, we met quite a unique group of people who have acted, most constructively, upon those beliefs.

The consortium of communities, incorporated as Turtle Mountain Sustainable Ventures, decided that by working together they could accomplishment so much more.

Mark Witherspoon, Mayor of Killarney, Les Routledge, from the Prairie Practitioners' Group, Cliff Cullen, MLA for Turtle Mountain Constituency and Roy Arnott, Agricultural Representative from Manitoba Agriculture and Food, were waiting outside the Killarney Town Hall. I was about to attend my first Town Hall Meeting.

Les explained to the Mission Green team that the vision of the TMSV is to build sustainable agricultural communities by advancing the establishment of new environmentally sustainable ventures that will in turn improve the economic vitality of the region, thus creating sustainable employment and encouraging community population retention.

The communities have a vision of having eggs in more than one basket, so to speak. They want to diversify, to attract new investment in the area. But they are being choosy. They don't just want a company to come in and build a factory or plant. They would like to attract corporations that have the same beliefs they do, beliefs grounded in sustainability, environment protection and preservation.

They are investigating a variety of areas so a major catastrophe like a drought or beef problem don't have a huge impact on all aspects of livelihood.

They've looked at attracting investment in renewable energy enterprises including wind, ethanol and bio-gas. They hope to stimulate the development of diversified agriculture options including livestock, aquaculture and greenhouse operations.

Our visit made me realize that, as you drive through these prairie towns with their wide streets and laid-back atmosphere, you immediately think 'farming community'. But there is more to these communities going on than you think.

There are people here and in communities like these across the Prairies that are working to change the way others think about the sun and the wind. To the Turtle Mountain Sustainable Ventures group, these resources are like gold.

Mission Green enjoyed saluting this consortium and their true spirit of cooperation and conservation, their partnership of planning and their eager leaning toward their future.

http://www.killarneymanitoba.com/tmsv.htm
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Environmental Initiative #55
Whitewater Lake Wildlife Management Area , Boissevain Manitoba

We've left Killarney behind. The quiet of the day has gotten even deeper if possible.

But there's no quiet in my head, which is full of new thoughts, facts and figures from our last visit. And it's about to be bombarded with more information because Ian Witherspoon, a biologist with Ducks Unlimited Canada, with me here in the GMC Yukon, is taking us to one of his pet projects. The Wildlife Management Area of Whitewater Lake, a 13-km long, 8-km wide protected body of water, provides important breeding, brood rearing and staging for over 200 species of migratory birds.

This special, peaceful place has played host to endangered and rare species such as trumpeter swans, whooping cranes and our old friends, piping plovers.

Ducks Unlimited Canada completed the construction of two wetland cells, covering an area of 3,400 acres, in 1997. Eight miles of dyke are part of a water management system that protects the marsh cells and stimulates the growth of native Whitetop grass. The grass provides a rich feeding area and secure site for nesting birds and other wildlife early in the season and a valuable hay crop for local farmers in the late summer.

Ducks Unlimited are known world leaders in wetland conservation. But the organization knows that there is more to conservation than enhancing wildlife areas. DUC understands that, in order to ensure sustainable wildlife populations, farmers and other land managers have to incorporate wildlife-friendly farming practices into their agricultural operations.

For a wildlife habitat program to be truly effective, farmer and landowner philosophies must be respected if landscape change is to occur on a broad scale. Through a multitude of initiatives that the organization has spearheaded over the years, DUC has been able to make positive inroads in educating communities about sustainable agronomy practices.

Kevin Archibald, a local resource manager, farmer and landowner, has been working with Ian on a few of these practices. Traditional tilling practices would expose the soil to the harsh winter conditions of the prairies. By using a zero tillage system, that is, not tilling the soil at the end of the crop cycle, Kevin ensures that soil erosion on his land is reduced.

Zero tillage reduces energy use, pesticide and fertilizer dependence, lessens wear and tear on machinery and increases the production of the field.

Winter cereal production and fall-seeded crops also help to keep the soil in place and establish a root system, making it easier to produce year-round almost regardless of moisture conditions.

With every new idea, skeptics have to be won over, especially if there is an initial cost involved to get the new system going. Ducks Unlimited Canada has provided both financial and resource support to farmers for the past decade to this end.

The connection between zero tillage and wetland conservation seemed a bit vague to me. What did one have to do with the other?

It's that Big Picture idea returning again and again. The interconnectedness of what humans do to the land has a ripple effect of repercussions and consequences.

And Ian Witherspoon and Ducks Unlimited Canada have made positive ripples in protecting and conserving wetlands.

http://www.whitewaterlakemb.com/

http://www.ducks.ca/aboutduc/index.html
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New Flyer

New Flyer, headquartered in Winnipeg, is the largest bus manufacturer in North America with approximately 40% market share.

New Flyer's leadership is in part thanks to GM Allison's hybrid bus drive system, the world's first "roadworthy" commercial parallel hybrid solution for mass transit.

President & CEO John Marinucci explained that New Flyer is proactively identifying and implementing environmentally-friendly manufacturing processes of benefit to both employees and the community.

Bryan Swift, GM Canada's Director of Environmental Activities, talks about B.C. Transits purchase of New Flyer hybrid busses, the first in Canada.

For every GM Hybrid bus in service over 11,000 liters of fuel can be saved.

Bull Rumsey gears up for our plant tour with protective glasses and safety toe caps.

The rear section of an 18-meter articulated bus is shuffled through New Flyer's yard.

Ryan Bilan is ready to take us for a cruise.

Garry checks out the controls before setting out on his short parking lot stint.

The crisp interior seats up to 62 passengers with room for another 53 standees.

This articulated unit actually turns tighter than a conventional bus..

As we left the plant we noticed a different breed on "flyers" taking a break on their trip south.

Turtle Mountain Sustainable Ventures

Open farmland greeted us on our trip through south western Manitoba.

The folks in Killarney were keen to get a look at Mission Green's wheels.

Garry and MLA Turtle Mountain Constituency Cliff Cullen share a laugh.

The Turtle Mountain region is a prime growing area for product used in the production of ethanol.

Roy Arnott, Manitoba Agriculture and Food representative for Turtle Mountain, in his element.

Fire guards are plowed as a safety measure when conducting controlled burn.

Les Routledge has assisted Turtle Mountain Sustainable Ventures to develop a solid plan for future sustainable of the area.

This wind monitoring station is collecting data will be used to determine optimum locations for wind generators.

Mission Green heads out.

Whitewater Lake, Ducks Unlimited

Whitewater Lake has been designated as an Important Bird Area thanks to the efforts of Ducks Unlimited.

Ian Witherspoon of Ducks Unlimited commented that Whitewater Lake was the classic example of "build it and they will come".

The 2,000 acre refuge is visited by up to 200 species of migratory birds every year.

It took 3 years and 2 million dollars to complete the project.

Kevin Archibald's combine at work on one of the fields at his zero tillage farm.

Kevin, who has been using zero tillage techniques since 1994, recently won a Conservation Farm Family of the Year award..

Cory Archibald and a friend were right at home in the cab of the family's high tech combine machine.

Garry climbs up for a quick hello.

Thanks to some of the efforts of Ducks Unlimited these boys will adopt new techniques for conservation and resource management.

Kevin shows us grass that is being considered for use in southern US golf resorts..

Bill enjoys a little solitude at Whitewater Lake. .

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