Vancouver Sun

CONVERSATI­ONS THAT MATTER

- Please become a Patreon subscriber and support the production of this program, with a $1 pledge at goo.gl/ypxyds

Farming is a risky business.

According to Kristjan Hebert, reducing that risk comes down to numbers.

“You used to be able to blame financial losses on the weather,” he says. “You can't do that anymore.”

He uses an 8,000-acre farm as an example. To him, that's one seeder, two combines, one sprayer and three full-time workers plus the owner.

“The cost to operate that farm runs about $400 an acre,” he says.

It means the farmer needs to have access to about $3.2 million in cash and working capital to operate the farm from January to harvest.

The farmer also needs another $350 an acre in capital investment.

Knowing the farm's costs exactly allows farmers and their lenders to make informed decisions and run sophistica­ted enterprise­s.

“Central to risk management,” he says, “is the adoption of technology in farming.”

Hebert said technology today allows much more sophistica­ted data collection, allowing farmers to produce budget projection­s while allowing for unpredicta­ble weather.

Through the use of proper risk-management programs, “you can get your variants to be a lot smaller” on the downside.

We invited Hebert for a Conversati­on That Matters episode about the business of farming in Canada.

See the video at vancouvers­un. com/tag/conversati­ons-that-matter.

 ?? ?? Kristjan Hebert
Kristjan Hebert

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada