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Wednesday, July 1, 2015

MOhemp Energy will be poised to help the state become Energy Efficient Page 25



Hemp Biodiesel Image #TN4Hemp


Hemp Building & Insulation image: Hemp Technologies




Missouri Governor Nixon Announces State Clean Power Plan Page 24



Over the past five years, Gov. Nixon has made clean, reliable, affordable and abundant energy a priority of his administration. Missouri state agencies have reduced energy use by more than 22 percent since the Governor signed an executive order in 2009 directing agencies to reduce their energy use by two percent each year. The Governor also signed the Energy Efficiency Investment Act to give investor-owned utilities an incentive to implement energy efficiency programs, which protect the environment and hold down costs for consumers.

In 2010, the Governor's Strategic Initiative for Economic Growth identified "Energy Solutions" as one of seven target industries with the highest potential for creating jobs and spurring economic growth. Last year, in recognition of energy's unique and growing importance to the state's economy, Gov. Nixon issued an executive order realigning the Division of Energy from the Department of Natural Resources to the Department of Economic Development, which the General Assembly approved.
http://blog.stlouisrenewableenergy.com/2015/05/missouri-ranks-6th-from-bottom.html & https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KfEAbcTwmM#action=share


Missouri Energy Efficiency Ranking Page 23



Missouri Ranks 6th from the bottom of all USA States in energy efficiency. The sustainable insulating building
products from the Hemp plant can be utilized in MOhemp Energy's Home State to improve the energy efficiency of the buildings in the State.
http://blog.stlouisrenewableenergy.com/2015/05/missouri-ranks-6th-from-bottom.html
 Local Demand met by Local Resources!


Green and Sustainable Building Trends Page 22



1) Green building. Demand is finally coming back in the construction industry, and it’s coming back green. By 2016, more than half of all commercial and institutional construction will be environmentally sustainable, energy efficient or both. Green residential projects are on the rise as well. Abundant government subsidies and tax cuts for green building doesn’t hurt, either. IBISWorld projects 23% annual growth in the green building industry through 2016.

2) The US Green Building Council Colorado chapter predicts the following green building trends for 2015: Green construction powers industry:As a panel of developers and owners told us at our Commercial Real Estate Forum, green buildings are becoming a must-have for owners,” said Sharon Alton, executive director, USGBC Colorado.

3)I recently heard a powerful statistic presented by a guest speaker at Greenbuild 2013 in Philadelphia. Stuart Kaplow, an attorney and green building practitioner, said that over the last seven years, non-residential green building construction has grown from 1.4% to 44% of the construction market. He reminded the audience this represents a 3200% increase. So is green big? You bet it is. It continues to grow and it is the way most product manufacturers are using to reach out to designers.


Estimated returns to land, capital, and management per acre for industrial hemp and common Kentucky crops Page 21



1997 Crop Estimated return to land, capital, and management Dollars/acre Source: Table 13—Thompson
Hemp, seed only ........................................................220.15
Hemp, fiber only .........................................................316.45
Hemp, seed and fiber .................................................319.51
Hemp, certified seed only ...........................................605.91
Grain sorghum, conventional tillage .............................10.51
Wheat, reduced tillage .................................................14.24
Continuous corn ...........................................................75.71
Soybeans, no-till, rotation following crop .....................102.20
No-till corn, rotation following soybeans ......................106.48
Wheat/no-till soybeans, double-crop following corn..... 158.43


Hemp vs Corn and Soybeans Monetary Value Page 20



Corn
Income over Operating Costs/Acre
$107.45
Income over Total Costs/Acre
-$112.28


Soybeans
Income over Operating Cost/Acre
$162.87
Income over Total Costs/Acre
-$43.92


Hemp
2) Fiber Hemp / Acre
-116 to 473
3) Seed Hemp / Acre
-136 to 604
2) Various sources priced dry, defoliated stalks at $60 to $125 per metric ton. 3)One source estimated returns at $60 to $171 per acre for seed (for oil and feed), while another estimated seed returns at $800 per acre (2,000 pounds per acre at 40 cents per pound). Source: McNulty.
  • One Bushel of Soybean Produces: 1.5 gallons of soy oil AND 48 pounds of soybean meal, which supplies 21 pounds of protein animal feed. Industrial uses of soybean are inks, plastics, solvents and biodiesel.
  • University of Missouri Crop Resource Guide-5 year average annual value of Missouri corn production between 2010 and 2014 $2,028,491,200.00 http://crops.missouri.edu/audit/corn.htm#budget,
  • Missouri Soybean Facts Five-year average annual value of Missouri soybean production between 2010 and 2014a $2,476,185,600 http://crops.missouri.edu/audit/soybean.htm,

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