Times Colonist

Improvemen­ts to capital region’s meat processing called for in new study

- ANDREW A. DUFFY aduffy@timescolon­ist.com

A feasibilit­y study on the meatproces­sing industry in the capital region is calling for a new poultry abattoir, a meatproces­sing and distributi­on hub and a working group to identify how to overcome barriers holding back local meat production.

The three recommenda­tions were part of the Abattoir Feasibilit­y Study for the Capital Regional District, prepared by Greenchain Consulting for the South Island Prosperity Partnershi­p.

The report, funded by a $12,500 government grant, noted the local meat-processing industry is being held back by high land costs, regulation and abattoir capacity, and there needs to be a better option than shipping animals to the Lower Mainland for processing, a process that causes stress to the animals, increases farmers’ costs and does little to improve the local supply chain.

“We need to support farmers to provide a better, ethically sourced, local meat product to the community at a competitiv­e price,” said Emilie de Rosenroll, chief executive of SIPP. “This is vital to our region’s food security and agricultur­al economy.”

North Saanich Mayor Geoff Orr said the study highlights the critical lack of local meatproces­sing facilities and underscore­s the need for investment to ensure food security and longterm resilience for farmers.

The report noted poultry processing facilities on southern Vancouver Island are focused on processing their own poultry, meaning other producers have to ship animals farther afield. That increases costs, making locally raised poultry uncompetit­ive with imported options, despite the fact the public seems to prefer the local product. The report also noted a number of producers had to ship animals out of the region for processing because of red tape and a lack of abattoirs. New regulation­s introduced in 2004 cut the number of available abattoirs to 11 around the province from 300 in 2003.

There are only a handful of certified abattoirs on the Island — in Courtenay, Nanaimo and Duncan — as well as facilities on Saturna and Salt Spring islands.

Last year, in a move designed to increase meat supply in the Alberni-Clayoquot region, the province changed meat-inspection regulation­s to allow more farms to slaughter and sell animals.

The changes allowed farms with Class D slaughter licences to slaughter up to 25 animal units — one unit is 454 kg of meat — for sale to consumers or retail outlets like restaurant­s and meat shops in the region.

When it was announced, Agricultur­e Minister Lana Popham said the province had been working with ranchers, abattoir operators and regional government­s since 2017 to increase the amount of locally raised meat.

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