OPINIONS - EDITORIALS
LAWMAKERS SEE RED CEDAR AS CASH CROP, NOT BURDEN
Sunday, November 15, 2009
What else is out there that we're overlooking? Last week an Oklahoma lawmaker pulled together people... read more
PONTOTOC COUNTY ANOTHER EXAMPLE FOR LOCAL LEADERS
Sunday, November 08, 2009
Pontotoc County is the latest to provide evidence of why Canadian County commissioners need to look ... read more
THE DOLLAR APPEARS TO BUY MORE IN CLEVELAND COUNTY
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Should Canadian County commissioners consult commissioners in Cleveland County about building a jail... read more
SCHOOLS DESERVE SUPPORT IN TUESDAY ELECTION
Sunday, September 06, 2009
Here's hoping Tuesday's El Reno school bond election draws the same kind of support the city's Capit... read more
RESIDENTS NEED TO COME TOGETHER ON SCHOOL BOND ISSUE
Sunday, August 23, 2009
El Reno must come together and figure out a way to address the lack of funding that has historically... read more
JAIL TROUBLES CAUSED BY STATE'S FORM OF GOVERNMENT
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Canadian County taxpayers are again being threatened with having the state close their jail. Last ... read more
NURSING HOME RESIDENTS NEED PROTECTION
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Several years ago a woman wanted to build a new nursing home in El Reno. Her plan never had a chance... read more
REDLANDS NEEDS TO BETTER EXPLAIN CUTS
Sunday, June 21, 2009
First we were told Redlands Community College employees needed to take some furlough days because of... read more
LAST WEEK OKLAHOMA SAVED THE DOGS BUT KILLED THE KIDS
Sunday, April 26, 2009
On the same day Oklahoma State University announced it would no longer destroy animals used in the s... read more
Lack of questions came close to killing Parkview
Sunday, March 29, 2009
At last week's meeting of the Parkview Hospital Authority, Dr. Clinton Strong said the El Reno Tribu... read more
I-40 expansion means more growth on its way
Sunday, March 22, 2009
When El Reno City Manager Tony Rivera first arrived here about three years ago, he said the communit... read more
Fix jail then develop a plan
Sunday, March 08, 2009
County should fix jail and then work on a plan The issue State says county jail must correct p... read more
Status quo board is not healthy for El Reno's future
Sunday, February 15, 2009
The issue Parkview board is doing great disservice to the community We suggest Boa... read more
Voters Should decide El Reno's hospital Issue
Sunday, February 01, 2009
The issue Debate about Parkview Hospital has been circulating for several months We believe The c... read more
America's founding fathers put life first for a reason
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Today, hundreds of thousands of people will take to the streets of Washington, D.C., for the March f... read more
Lack of school study irritating
Sunday, January 25, 2009
The issue Republican leaders failed to make good on their promise to study financial woes of ... read more
Tribune Editorial
Sunday, January 04, 2009
Board member deserves apology for simply doing job The issue Matt White was berated by hospi... read more
LAWMAKERS SEE RED CEDAR AS CASH CROP, NOT BURDEN
RAY DYER
Edition:Sunday, November 15, 2009

What else is out there that we're overlooking?
Last week an Oklahoma lawmaker pulled together people to discuss the dreaded Eastern red cedar. Usually when people in Oklahoma talk about this tree, words are repeated that shouldn't be reproduced in print. But that didn't happen this time.
For years this pesky tree has plagued Oklahoma. Farmers and ranchers hate the tree because it sucks precious water from livestock and crops. Firemen curse it because it is essentially gasoline for wildfires. But last week, Rep. Richard Morrisette, D-Oklahoma City, brought together people who see another side of the red cedar, a good side.
“Clearing the cedar trees fixes one of the most newsworthy problems in Oklahoma last year – the wild fires,” Morrisette said. But what he and others learned at the conference was that “100 percent of the Eastern red cedar trees can be used to create products that could provide jobs for Oklahomans.”
That should get some attention.
Apparently, the oil that makes the trees such a fire hazard also has considerable value as an insecticide. It also helps create a pharmaceutical used to fight certain forms of cancer.
Some Oklahoma companies apparently know about this because they are finding ways to make a buck off the red cedar and create much-needed jobs as well.
Federal Recycling Technologies Inc. (FRT) of Norman and GC Renewable Resource Technologies LLC (GCRRT) of Commerce have developed different processes that derive marketable products from the Eastern red cedar.
FRT uses a pyrolytic process to heat shredded Eastern red cedar trees in the absence of oxygen to recover cedar oil. When refined, the aromatic oil fetches from $50 to $250 per gallon on the open market and has a wide range of applications from industrial to biomedical use.
“It is absurd that the United States imports cedar oil from China when we have the resource literally growing in our own backyard. So much, in fact, that production will never outstrip the feedstock,” said Dr. Robert Shapiro, president and CEO of FRT.
Shapiro points out that one of the most novel uses found for cedar oil by Johns Hopkins University is to eradicate the liver fluke which causes schistosomiasis, the number two killer behind malaria in tropical climates. “When combined with a surfactant and sprayed on infested waters, the cedar oil kills the liver fluke parasite.”
The firm located in Commerce uses the red cedar to produce bio-energy products that are finding a niche as a heating oil in Northern Europe.
Morrisette said he will propose an Eastern red cedar initiative that could “pave the way for investment in numerous technologies that will take advantage of this opportunity.
“I want Oklahoma to be the first in the nation to put in place a viable initiative that will take advantage of the Eastern red cedar problem by stimulating new industry and creating new jobs as well.”
Oklahoma State University estimated the economic losses to Oklahoma by 2013 if the red cedar problem goes untreated as $447 million, which includes $107 million lost due to catastrophic wildfires, $205 million in cattle forage lost, $107 million in lease hunting lost, $17 million in recreation lost, and $11 million in water yield lost.
If Morrisette can find a way to turn those negative numbers into a positive, Oklahomans will be very grateful. We wish him success. No doubt, so do many farmers and firemen.






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