Not exact matches
The other, a wild relative
of sugarcane (Saccharum spontaneum), provides hardiness to harsh environments and the ability to ratoon or produce additional profitable crops from re-growth
after harvest.
Less than a year
after its commissioning, the factory has been shut down, crushing the hopes
of sugarcane growers in the region.
MIT students and lecturer Amy Smith turned to widely available bagasse, the stalks
of sugarcane plants left
after squeezing the sugar out, and created a charcoal replacement by burning, compressing, and mixing the material with a binding agent.
Data collection was performed from January to May 2011, and the analyses took place before, during and
after a sharp fluctuation in ethanol prices — owing to macroeconomic factors such as the international price
of sugar (Brazilian ethanol is made from
sugarcane)-- leading consumers to switch motor fuels in São Paulo City.
Day 15:
After a tour
of the cattle town
of Rockhampton it is north through station country to Mackay and then through lush
sugarcane fields to the beautiful Whitsunday area and Airlie Beach
see: Expansion
of Industrial Logging in Central Africa Science 8 June 2007: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/316/5830/1451?etoc —
After the rainforests are gone in Africa, S.A. and Indonesia they'll replant it in African oil palms and
sugarcane for even more fuel to add to atmospheric load
of greenhouse gas.