| Release 98-49 | |||
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 20, 1998 |
CONTACT: |
Jerry Martin Gennet Osborn (916) 322-2990 www.arb.ca.gov |
ARB Chairman John D. Dunlap said, "Promising new uses for rice straw are emerging from entrepreneurs across the nation, and with this program, some of those new businesses will have extra help bringing those uses into commercial reality."
The public is encouraged to attend a public meeting in December when top-scoring applicants will describe their proposed projects. The Board is expected to award the grant monies in March 1999.
About $2 million, which is available for the 1998-99 fiscal
year, will be awarded according to criteria approved by the Board last January. Part of that criteria requires
that each applicant provide at least 50 percent of the project cost.
The two-year Rice Straw Demonstration Project Fund was established last
year by Senate Bill 318 (Thompson), and the ARB was named administrator. This followed the 1991 Rice Straw Burning
Reduction Act that required rice growers in the Sacramento Valley to phase out burning by 2000. The Rice Fund was
created to help growers, businesses and others affected by the phase down find promising, commercial uses for rice
straw.
During the last fiscal year, three projects were awarded a total of over $2 million in funding by the ARB. They included rice straw particle board, livestock feed and development a large-scale straw harvesting and distribution system.
Approximately 500,000 acres of rice are grown in the Sacramento Valley annually, producing about 1.5 million tons of straw. Only one percent of the unburned straw is currently removed from the fields and used, while the remaining 99 percent is ploughed back into the ground.
Information about the program and the application for the grants
are available on the Internet at: http://www.arb.ca.gov/smp/rice/ricefund/ricefund.htm
or by calling (916) 322-7297.
The Air Resources Board is a department of the California Environmental
Protection Agency. ARB's mission is to promote and protect public health, welfare, and ecological resources
through effective reduction of air pollutants while recognizing and considering effects on the economy. The
ARB oversees all air pollution control efforts in California to attain and maintain health based air quality standards.
# # # # #