Prairie Post (West Edition)

Not impressed fast food place tries to make Canadian agricultur­e look bad

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EDITOR:

I was rather underwhelm­ed by recent press regarding McDonalds starting to sell “certified sustainabl­e beef”.

Claims that this is the first such program in the world don’t bear much scrutiny.

Having read the program production protocols, I can assure you they are considerab­ly less rigorous than those I was meeting for the Scottish Farm Assurance program in the early 1990s.

My experience with that program doesn’t encourage me that there will be any benefit to Canadian cattle producers from this program in the long run.

The Scottish model similarly encouraged early participat­ion with the promise of market premiums, yet once a critical mass was achieved the premiums disappeare­d and anyone that wasn’t “Farm Assured” had their produce discounted in the marketplac­e.

I predict Canada will follow the same path as Scotland with the cattle producer left to shoulder the burden of ongoing costs and regulation to meet the standards in perpetuity for no financial benefit.

With only $20 per head being used as the bait in the trap -- and this being paid to the feedlot operator -- the rancher likely won’t get enough to buy a Big Mac the day he is in town selling his calves!

What really rankles me though, is that farmers and ranchers must be certified as having production practices attaining a certain level of environmen­tal and operationa­l sustainabi­lity - for McDonalds!

The same McDonalds whose menu items are generally considered junk food contributi­ng to the obesity epidemic and include a throw away Chinese made plastic toy with every “kids meal”?

I’d like to know where the sustainabi­lity, environmen­tal or otherwise, is in this case, and who is auditing them?

I think the real driver of this program is fulfilling the desire of agri-food processors and retailers to environmen­tally “greenwash” their corporate images in the eyes of the consumer.

What they are really trying to buy for $20 is the trusted reputation farmers and ranchers have built up over generation­s. I’m sorry, but mine isn’t for sale and I won’t be participat­ing in any such scheme.

IAIN AITKEN

BELMONT, MANITOBA

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