Edmonton Journal

Study illustrate­s fragmentin­g of prime Alberta farmland

Agricultur­al acreage remains constant, but it becomes fragmented, marginaliz­ed

- JONNY WAKEFIELD jwakefield@postmedia.com

David Wedman and his family have had a front-row seat to Edmonton’s urban sprawl.

For decades, the grain farmer on the city’s southweste­rn border has watched subdivisio­ns and other urban developmen­t creep onto some of the province’s best cropland.

“As a kid growing up, there used to be 25 farms in this area. Now there’s only half a dozen,” said Wedman, who’s farmed for almost 50 years on property that’s been in his family for more than a century.

A new study, which appeared in the April edition of the journal Land Use Policy, used satellite data to track 30 years of changing land use in the Edmonton-Calgary corridor.

“I had heard a lot about developmen­t taking over farms and things of that nature, but it was interestin­g to have a concrete way to look at that happening,” said lead author Kayla Stan, a PhD student at the University of Alberta who used similar techniques to track deforestat­ion in Brazil.

The Edmonton-Calgary corridor covers 100 km to the east and west of the Queen Elizabeth II Highway — an area slightly smaller than Nova Scotia — in Alberta’s heartland.

The region contains some of the best farmland in the province and its three largest urban areas, including two of Canada’s fastestgro­wing cities.

In satellite images Stan compiled for the study, Edmonton and Calgary appear as blobs at either end of a dark rectangle.

They’re white in the centre — each city’s footprint in the 1980s — surrounded by yellow, orange and red bands representi­ng each successive decade. Smaller blobs dot the highway between the two and encircle a sting of blue dots — urban growth around the region’s lakes.

Stan, who specialize­s in modelling land cover change, classified thousands of “patches” of land from NASA’s Landsat satellite. An algorithm marked land as urban, farmland or natural area, and tracked how those patches changed between 1984 and 2013.

Brent Swallow, a professor of agricultur­al, life and environmen­tal sciences at the U of A, said the study is the first to look at landuse change in the entire region over such a long period of time.

The study shows that cities, for the most part, have expanded onto farmland.

Since 1984, Edmonton, Calgary, Red Deer and other cities nearly doubled the amount of land within their boundaries, collective­ly growing from 3,000 to 5,000 square kilometres.

The amount of farmland has remained largely unchanged, at around 17,000 square kilometres. But that land is increasing­ly fragmented, pushed into marginal areas that were once grassland and forest.

“For agricultur­al land, it’s more of where it’s being lost, as opposed to how much is being lost,” Stan said. “You get a lot of loss in agricultur­al land in the very, very good farm land areas, especially around Edmonton and Calgary.”

Stan used the historical trends in land use to chart what the corridor might look like in the next five years if those trends continue, if the economy booms or goes bust, or if government clamps down on urban sprawl.

Edmonton’s borders are projected to run into neighbouri­ng municipali­ties in all but the lowest

You get a lot of loss in agricultur­al land in the very, very good farm land areas, especially around Edmonton and Calgary.

growth scenarios. That fits with the city’s ongoing push to annex lands on its southern border.

Stan also considers the impacts of two hypothetic­al checks on growth adopted in other jurisdicti­ons.

One is greenbelts, first proposed to curb urban growth in the U.K. beginning in the 1930s. The other is a land suitabilit­y system like B.C.’s Agricultur­al Land Reserve, instituted by the province’s first NDP government in 1974 and designed to protect farmland.

Protecting prime farmland in a reserve would check urban growth slightly, while protecting about the same amount of farmland but in larger parcels.

If the province brought in greenbelts, urban land expansion would be rolled back even further, while farmland would grow.

Swallow said it’s unlikely the provincial NDP government would take a risk on land reserves or greenbelts, which could anger rural voters.

But local government­s are becoming more mindful about conserving land on their boundaries. Last year, the Capital Region Board for the first time began incorporat­ing agricultur­e land protection into new regional growth plans.

“Some of the worst sprawl in Canada has occurred in the Capital Region over the last 30 years, but perhaps we can be an example of what can be done in a positive way, too,” he said.

 ?? LARRY WONG ?? Kayla Stan, a University of Alberta PhD student, shows images that depict urban growth in the Edmonton-Calgary corridor. She used decades of satellite images to chart how changes in the Edmonton-Calgary corridor have affected farmland, grassland and...
LARRY WONG Kayla Stan, a University of Alberta PhD student, shows images that depict urban growth in the Edmonton-Calgary corridor. She used decades of satellite images to chart how changes in the Edmonton-Calgary corridor have affected farmland, grassland and...

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