The Woolwich Observer

Big farms – and small farms – are growing

- OWEN ROBERTS

Agricultur­al census watchers have seen farm numbers dwindle ever since the 1940s. They fell from almost 247,000 in 2001 to about 193,500 in 2016, when the last census was taken (it’s taken every five years).

It was alarming to see the country lose more than 50,000 farms in just 15 years.

Meanwhile, big farms were growing. Their numbers escalated from 6,155 farms in 2001 to almost 9,100 in 2016.

Statistics Canada tried to explain that farms had become increasing­ly sophistica­ted businesses and had grown to scale.

Then last week, results of the 2021 agricultur­al census were released. Immediatel­y, we were warned by the department that “comparison­s with earlier census results should be interprete­d with caution,” because it redefined what constitute­s a farm.

Before 2021, a farm was considered an agricultur­al operation that produced at least one agricultur­al product intended for sale.

Now, a “farm” or “agricultur­al building” is a “unit” that produces agricultur­al products and reports revenues and expenses for tax purposes.

And although this makes comparison­s to the past questionab­le, it does point to trends.

For example, overall farm numbers have dropped again, this time by about 3,500 farms in five years.

Canada is down to just under 190,000 farms of all types.

But big farms – the ones that do indeed report revenues and expenses – are still growing. Statistics Canada says in the past five years, 130 more of these units came to be, for a total of 9,120 farms.

In Ottawa, a “big” farm is one with 3,520 acres or more. In reality, that’s small to mid-sized on the prairies, where it’s normal for grain farms to exceed the 10,000-acre range.

For the census, the entire range of 3,520-acre farms is lumped together, while much smaller units are viewed in lesser increments. I’m sure this is historical, back to the days when a 1,000-acre farm was a whopper. But that’s no longer the case and needs another look by Statistics Canada for the 2026 census.

Anyway, farms from 3,500 acres and under, all the way down to 130 acres, continue on a slow decline.

But if you believe the figures – and given Statistics Canada’s caveat, there’s reason for doubt – small farms are bucking the trend.

The smallest, under 10 acres, grew by a little more than 400 farms, to 13,607.

The next biggest, 10-70 acres, held their own at

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