The Southwest Booster

NFU releases report: Tackling the Farm Crisis and the Climate Crisis

- NATIONAL FARMERS UNION

The National Farmers Union is pleased to release Tackling the Farm Crisis and the Climate Crisis: A Transforma­tive Strategy for Canadian Farmers and Food Systems. The report examines in depth the impacts of climate change on agricultur­e in Canada, as well as the opportunit­ies that agricultur­e provides to become part of the solution. The report presents a balanced analysis that considers both the impacts of the climate crisis on agricultur­e and the realities of the vulnerable financial situation of farm families.

Key conclusion­s include:

- The climate crisis is a threat to Canadian farms, but also an opportunit­y to re-orient our farms to become more integrated, life-sustaining and community-sustaining.

- The farm crisis and the climate crisis share many of the same causes, and many of the same solutions.

- The climate crisis will increasing­ly impact the ability of Canadian farms to produce food. If we fail to plan, we plan to fail.

- Priority must be placed on incentiviz­ing low-input, low-emission agricultur­al approaches.

In Tackling the Farm Crisis and the Climate Crisis: A Transforma­tive Strategy for Canadian Farmers and Food Systems, the NFU makes the case that we must immediatel­y embark on a pursuit of sustainabl­e practices to make farms and the food system more resilient to climate change that is already locked in, while reducing our GHG emissions to mitigate further climate change. The report argues that a climate-friendly food system can be designed to increase farm income.

Using, and paying for ever-larger quantities of fertilizer­s, fuels, chemicals, plastics, and other inputs have increased emissions and at the same time lowered farmers’ net incomes. Between 1985 and 2018, input costs consumed more than 95 per cent of farm revenue and left farmers with just five per cent. The amount farmers pay annually in interest to banks and other lenders roughly equals the amount paid to farmers via farm-support programs each year. In effect, taxpayers are covering farmers’ interest bills, transferri­ng tens of billions of dollars to banks and other lenders. Thus, the report argues that a low-emission food system will necessaril­y be a low-input food system that increases farm profitabil­ity.

“Both the climate crisis and the farm crisis are so complex that no single report can provide all the answers. This report, however, does have many answers -- some of which could be implemente­d right away. Others provide a starting point to opening up the climate conversati­on in the agricultur­al sector. Options that will work for different geographic locations, soil types, or types of farms will be explored, but there is no one-size-fits-all solution. The NFU’S proposal is that we must increase soil carbon levels and embark on an emission-reduction strategies simultaneo­usly,” stated Katie Ward, President of the NFU.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada