The Woolwich Observer

Major agricultur­al trends for 2020 taking root locally

- OWEN ROBERTS

Major agricultur­al trends being predicted this year for all of Canada are taking root here in the region. Although it’s months before crop producers will be in their fields, they’re keeping an eye on at least three significan­t issues bound to colour the way farming goes in 2020 – before they have a single seed in the ground.

Those issues, and the trends that either preceded them or developed from them, were described Tuesday by Farm Credit Canada (FCC), our country’s biggest farm financer. It holds a $36-billion lending portfolio, which keeps it on its toes, forecastin­g where the industry is headed so money can be available when and where it’s needed.

The issues – climate change, protection­ism and automation – underline how agricultur­e is both global and local, in some other continent as well as right there in the field next to your subdivisio­n.

J.P. Gervais, FCC’s chief agricultur­al economist, says these issues could significan­tly change the way Canadian farm operations, agri-businesses and food processors do business at home and around the world. The test, he says, is how farmers will adapt to take advantage of the opportunit­ies or mitigate the challenges that come with each of these trends.

That’s big stuff. FCC and others who advise farmers are increasing­ly focussing on management – that is, helping farmers manage for potential risks and stay profitable and sustainabl­e.

Now, that’s one thing when the risk is nearby, like urban encroachme­nt or a veterinary shortage. But it reaches new anxiety-riddled heights when the causes are mostly out of farmers’ hands.

For example, what can farmers do about a chronic labour shortage? Automation is one response. Gervais says that despite global economic turmoil, the outlook for Canadian agricultur­e and food in 2020 remains positive thanks to ongoing investment­s in technology and innovation.

“These investment­s enable Canada to produce a wide range of commoditie­s and processed foods, which helps the country maintain its competitiv­e position in the world export market,” he says.

Some farmers can create automation themselves, but on a broad scale, they need to buy it. They can try influencin­g labour shortages by pressuring Ottawa to support migrant worker programs. They can support organizati­ons such as AgScape that introduce agricultur­e into classrooms across the province and familiariz­e young people with food production and related careers. But for the most part they can’t make anyone, local or otherwise, develop a taste for farm work.

The same goes for climate change. It affects us locally and requires action here, but it’s also a huge, complicate­d issue that needs attention worldwide. Activists ignite antagonism against farmers by blaming them and their livestock for global warming and climate change, sparking pro-environmen­t campaigns with themes such as “agricultur­e isn’t destroying the planet – it’s feeding it.” The goal is to try to clarify farming’s contributi­on to greenhouse gas emissions, which is about eight per cent of the total, at least in the US. Transporta­tion comes in at almost 30 per cent.

Protection­ism – that is, foreign countries unfairly closing their borders to trade, or subsidizin­g it hugely – rounds out the big three from FCC. Again, farmers feel helpless against it. Most recently, Grain Farmers Ontario have called for Ottawa to set up a trade war fund, to support farmers hammered by protection­ism. But they can’t fight it themselves.

The themes and issues identified by FCC carried over from 2019 and will likely be repeated next year … which is another frustratio­n for farmers. No wonder that for them, mental health is also a major issue.

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