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Get the dirt on soil health June 18th

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June 18 workshop features key information for landowners

(RED DEER COUNTY) ā€“ Red Deer County and the Grey Wooded Forage Association are pleased to announce an upcoming workshop on soil health for local landowners.

Participants will learn from expert speaker Dr. Kris Nichols on soil health and its impact on productivity, the environment, and your financial bottom line.

The workshop will be held on June 18 from 5:00 PM to 8:30 PM at Cottonwood Hall.

Deadline for registration is June 15, and space is limited.
To register call GWFA at 403.224.8645 or
go to the calendar section of rdcounty.ca
To stay up to date with Red Deer County, visit www.rdcounty.ca or go to our Twitter and Facebook pages.

President Todayville Inc., Honorary Colonel 41 Signal Regiment, Board Member Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Arts Award Foundation, Director Canadian Forces Liaison Council (Alberta) musician, photographer, former VP/GM CTV Edmonton.

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Agriculture

It’s time to end supply management

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From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy

By Ian Madsen

Ending Canadaā€™s dairy supply management system would lower costs, boost exports, and create greater economic opportunities.

The Trump administrationā€™s trade warfare is not all bad. Aside from spurring overdue interprovincial trade barrier elimination and the removal of obstacles to energy corridors, it has also spotlighted Canadaā€™s dairy supply management system.

The existing marketing board structure is a major hindrance to Canadaā€™s efforts to increase non-U.S. trade and improve its dismalĀ productivity growth rateā€”crucial to reviving stagnant living standards. Ending it would lower consumer costs, make dairy farming more dynamic, innovative and export-oriented, and create opportunities for overseas trade deals.

PoliticiansĀ soldĀ supply management to Canadians to ensure affordable milk and dairy products for consumers without costing taxpayers anythingā€”while avoiding unsightly dumping surplus milk or sudden price spikes. While the government has not paid dairy farmers directly, consumers have paid more at the supermarket than their U.S. neighbours for decades.

An October 2023 C.D. Howe InstituteĀ analysisĀ showed that, over five years, the Canadian price for four litres of partly skimmed milk generally exceeded the U.S. price (converted to Canadian dollars) by more than a dollar, sometimes significantly more, and rarely less.

A 2014Ā studyĀ conducted by the University of Manitoba, published in 2015, found that lower-income households bore an extra burden of 2.3 per cent of their income above the estimated cost for free-market-determined dairy and poultry products (i.e., vs. non-supply management), amounting to $339 in 2014 dollars ($435 in current dollars). Higher-income households paid an additional 0.5 per cent of their income, or $554 annually in 2014 dollars ($712 today).

One of the pillars of the current system is production control, enforced by production quotas for every dairy farm. These quotas only gradually rise annually, despite abundant production capacity. As a result, millions of litres of milk are dumped in some years, according to a 2022Ā articleĀ by the Montreal Economic Institute.

Beyond production control, minimum price enforcement further entrenches inefficiency. Prices are set based on estimated production costs rather than market forces, keeping consumer costs high and limiting competition.

Import restrictions are the final pillar. They ensure foreign producers do not undercut domestic ones. Jaime Castaneda, executive vice-president of the U.S. National Milk Producers Federation,Ā complainedĀ that the official 2.86 per cent non-tariffed Canadian import limit was not reached due to non-tariff barriers. Canadian tariffs of overĀ 250 per centĀ apply to imports exceeding quotas from the European Union, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, and the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA, or USMCA).

Dairy import protection obstructs efforts to reach more trade deals. Defending this system forces Canada to extend protection to foreign partnersā€™ favoured industries. Affected sectors include several where Canada is competitive, such as machinery and devices, chemicals and plastics, and pharmaceuticals and medical products. This impedes efforts to increase non-U.S. exports of goods and services. Diverse and growing overseas exports are essential to reducing vulnerability to hostile U.S. trade policy.

It may require paying dairy farmers several billion dollars to transition from supply managementā€”though this cartel-determined ā€œmarketā€ value is dubious, as the current inflation-adjusted book value is much lowerā€”but the cost to consumers and the economy is greater.Ā New ZealandĀ successfully evolved from a similar import-protected dairy industry into a vast global exporter. Canada must transform to excel. The current system limits Canadaā€™s freedom to find greener pastures.

Ian MadsenĀ is the Senior Policy Analyst at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

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Agriculture

Grain farmers warn Canadians that retaliatory tariffs against Trump, US will cause food prices to soar

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

 

One of Canadaā€™s prominent agricultural advocacy groups warned that should the federal Liberal government impose counter-tariffs on the United States, it could make growing food more expensive and would be a nightmare for Canadian farmers and consumers.

According toĀ Grain Growers of Canada (GGC) executive director Kyle Larkin, the cost of phosphate fertilizer, which Canada does not make, would shoot up should the Mark Carney Liberal government enact counter-tariffs to U.S. President Donald Trumpā€™s.

Larkin said recently that there is no ā€œdomestic phosphate production here (in Canada), so we rely on imports, and the United States is our major supplier.ā€

ā€œA 25% tariff on phosphate fertilizer definitely would have an impact on grain farmers,ā€ he added.

According to Statistics Canada, from 2018 to 2023, Canada imported about 4.12 million tonnes of fertilizer from the United States. This amount included 1.46 million tonnes of monoammonium phosphates (MAP) as well as 92,027 tonnes of diammonium phosphate (DAP).

Also imported were 937,000 tonnes of urea, 310,158 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, and 518,232 tonnes of needed fertilizers that have both nitrogen and phosphorus.

According to Larkin, although most farmers have purchased their fertilizer for 2025, they would be in for a rough 2026 should the 25 percent tariffs on Canadian exports by the U.S. still stand.

Larkin noted how Canadian farmers are already facing ā€œsky-high input costs and increased government regulations and taxation.ā€

He said the potential ā€œtariff on fertilizer is a massive concern.ā€

Trump has routinely cited Canadaā€™sĀ lack of actionĀ on drug trafficking and border security as the main reasons forā€Æhis punishing tariffs.

About three weeks ago, TrumpĀ announcedĀ he was giving Mexico and Canada a 30-day reprieve on 25 percent export tariffs for goods covered by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) on free trade.

However, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, despite the reprieve from Trump, later threatened to impose a 25 percent electricity surcharge on three American states. Ford, however, quicklyĀ stopped hisĀ planned electricity surcharge after Trump threatened a sharp increase on Canadian steel and aluminum in response to his threats.

As it stands, Canada has in place a 25 percent counter tariff on some $30 billion of U.S. goods.

It is not yet clear how new Prime MinisterĀ Mark CarneyĀ will respond to Trumpā€™s tariffs. However, he may announce something after he calls the next election, which he is expected to do March 23.

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