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<gallery>
	<item image="Images/22.jpg"title="B&J Farms greenhouse operation&#xA;500x330"caption="B&J Farms greenhouse operation has 11 acres under glass."/>
	<item image="Images/21.jpg"title="Greenhouse worker on the job&#xA;500x330"caption="Greenhouse worker on the job"/>
	<item image="Images/20.jpg"title="Jim Carroll and Jagrajbir Uppal&#xA;500x330"caption="Jim Carroll - President of BIOMASS SECURE POWER with Jagrajbir Uppal - one of the owners of B&J Farms"/>
	<item image="Images/19.jpg"title="Control system for watering and fertilizing&#xA;500x330"caption="Control system for watering and fertilizing the greenhouses"/>
	<item image="Images/18.jpg"title="Hot water storage tank&#xA;500x330"caption="Hot water storage tank"/>
	<item image="Images/17.jpg"title="Picture of greenhouses from neighboring property&#xA;500x330"caption="Picture of greenhouses from neighboring property"/>
	<item image="Images/16.jpg"title="Office and shipping area&#xA;500x330"caption="Office and shipping area"/>
	<item image="Images/15.jpg"title="Inside view of greenhouse&#xA;500x330"caption="Inside view of one section of a greenhouse"/>
	<item image="Images/14.jpg"title="Boiler&#xA;500x330"caption="Boiler"/>
	<item image="Images/13.jpg"title="Back view of shipping and receiving area&#xA;500x330"caption="Back view of shipping and receiving area"/>
	<item image="Images/01.jpg"title="Mountain Pine Beetle&#xA;513x576"caption="The Mountain Pine Beetle (MPB), is native to the forests of western North America. Periodic outbreaks of the insect, can result in the loss of millions of trees."/>
	<item image="Images/02.jpg"title="Beetle Signs&#xA;300x327"caption="Signs and symptoms of Mountain Pine Beetle attack are: (1) Popcorn-shaped masses of resin, called pitch tubes. (2) Boring dust on the ground immediately adjacent to the base of the tree."/>
	<item image="Images/03.jpg"title="Beetle Trails Sketch&#xA;350x492"caption="Under epidemic conditions of the Mountain Pine Beetle, enough beetles can emerge from an infested tree to kill at least two or more trees the following year."/>
	<item image="Images/04.jpg"title="Pine Beetle Trails&#xA;500x503"caption="Success of the attacks is confirmed by looking under the bark for beetles and their tunnels. If successful, each beetle pair mates, forms a vertical tunnel under the bark, and produces about 75 eggs."/>
	<item image="Images/05.jpg"title="Forest Devistation&#xA;500x332"caption="The Ministry of Forests and Range estimates that as of 2007 the cumulative area of Provincial Crown Forest affected to some degree was about 13.5 million hectares."/>
	<item image="Images/06.jpg"title="Infected Forest&#xA;300x260"caption="This map shows British Columbia’s affected timber areas (yellow), and timber areas of major outbreak (orange) from the Mountain Pine Beetle. "/>
	<item image="Images/09.jpg"title="Aerial View 1&#xA;500x374"caption="An important method of prevention is forest management. In general, Mountain Pine Beetles prefer forests that are old and dense. Managing the forest by creating diversity in age and structure will result in a healthy forest that will be more resilient and less vulnerable to Mountain Pine Beetles."/>
	<item image="Images/10.jpg"title="Aerial View 2&#xA;600x449"caption="Allowable annual cuts have been increased as an emergency measure for salvaging or recovering the greatest value possible from beetle-attacked timber."/>
	<item image="Images/11.jpg"title="Aerial View 3&#xA;640x480"caption="As beetle-attacked timber is thinned out to prevent further infestation, it can be used for energy generation for years to come."/>
	<item image="Images/12.jpg"title="Aerial View 4&#xA;500x330"caption="BIOMASS SECURE POWER will use 100% of the tree for fuel, reducing the risk of leaving behind beetles that will infect other trees. The Provincial Government of British Columbia has established that 4.4 million cubic meters of biomass fuel is available per year for the next twenty years for use as a biomass fuel."/>
</gallery>
	
