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Good morning, everyone. We'll get this meeting number 16 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food called to order. We will be continuing our study on the environmental contribution of agriculture.
I have a few housekeeping notes, colleagues. Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of November 25, 2021. The proceedings will be made available via the House of Commons website. So you are aware, the webcast will always show the person who's speaking rather than the entirety of the committee. As we know, no screenshots or photos are permitted during the proceedings and, of course, for those in the room, let's make sure that we're being mindful of the health protocols that are established by the Board of Internal Economy.
I certainly look forward to welcoming our guests. For your benefit—I believe you are all in the room, so it's exciting to have you back—in terms of language, you can toggle between English and French on the headset in front of you.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, January 31, 2022, the committee is resuming its study of the environmental contribution of agriculture.
I'd like to welcome our first panel today. Joining us in person we have Susie Miller, executive director of the Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Crops; and Erin Gowriluk, who is the executive director of Grain Growers of Canada. We have Fawn Jackson, who is the director of policy and international affairs with the Canadian Cattlemen's Association. I also have Duane Thompson, who is the chair of the environment committee for the Canadian Cattlemen's Association.
Each of our organizations will have five minutes for opening remarks.
Colleagues, one thing I just wanted to highlight is that there is a possibility of a potential procedural vote this morning. If you'll indulge me, I was wondering if we might be able to get unanimous consent that, if the bells do start for whatever reason, you can give me discretion to get us closer down so we can continue our work.
Thank you so much for the opportunity to appear before you, and actually in person. It feels good.
I'm Susie Miller, executive director of the Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Crops. We're an organization that is committed to pursuing opportunities and meeting the challenges of the sustainability of the production of cereals, oilseeds and pulses in Canada. Our members are grain farm organizations, input suppliers, grain marketers, food companies, conservation associations and researchers. We cover all of the stakeholders.
You've already received an extensive amount of excellent advice. Rather than repeating that, I thought I could focus my remarks on what grain farmers have told us about sustainability challenges and opportunities. We conducted conversations with them in winter last year and winter this year. We talked to over 600 individual farmers.
What they're saying is this. First and foremost, they want to be recognized for their contributions to climate solutions and for actions that they've taken and continue to take to reduce greenhouse gas emissions on their farms and to sequester carbon in their soil. They feel somewhat like they're the villains, and they see themselves more like heroes. Good environmental practices like soil health have always been important to crop farmers. They're proud of the work they do. They want to be seen as professionals who have the expertise to undertake the right decisions.
They've told us that there are many ways to reach the end goals of soil health and GHG emissions reduction. It's important for them, for government and also for their customers not to arbitrarily dismiss certain practices as inadequate, to favour one practice over the other or to select a specific practice as “the” solution. They think their ways of reaching the end goal should be based on science, and they want the calculation of costs and benefits and impacts on them. Research is critical to identify not only best practices but also how to limit the risks of implementing new practices. They expressed that new and improved technology can help them in where they want to go.
They also told us—I'm sure you've heard this before—that the differences between regions and between farms must be recognized. One size does not fit all is something that we heard quite frequently. One example they raised quite often was no till. As a beneficial practice in western Canada, it could be more challenging in eastern Canada with wetter climates. Cover crops, for example, are challenging when the ground is frozen by the time you harvest.
Farmers have also told us that modern farming practices and wildlife can and do coexist. When it comes to nature-based solutions, they see some significant cost or lost revenue that can conflict with their risk management and viability goals. They would like to see these costs quantified and considered when supporting nature-based solutions.
They expressed most of all that they really do want to contribute. They feel that they do already, but they want to contribute more. They see potential conflicts, or more like trade-offs, between various priorities of the Government of Canada and the people of Canada that implicate them: reducing greenhouse gas emissions from farms, increasing the feedstock for renewable fuels, Canada’s contribution to world food security and the farm sector’s contribution to the economic growth. They're not certain how they can help meet all of those at the same time.
They would like changes to the market, which does not value the contribution they're making to climate solutions or consider the investments that farmers have to make. They worry about the loss of their ability to use modern farming practices that help them improve soil health and sequester carbon. They fear, as I'm sure you're aware, additional regulations or targets that are arbitrarily imposed, from their perspective, without due consideration of their ability to meet them.
Most of all, they want to be an active partner with governments and customers in determining the best way to make their contribution to climate change mitigation.
Thank you.
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Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for the invitation to address all of you today on this topic of importance to farmers, to Canadians and to the world.
It is very nice to have the opportunity to see many of your faces in person now. Thank you for that.
My name is Erin Gowriluk. I'm executive director of the Grain Growers of Canada, a national association that represents the interests of about 65,000 grain, pulse and oilseed farmers in every province across the country.
As the voice of Canada's grain farmers, I would like to stress that our members view their relationship to the land as paramount. Their livelihood depends on it. Leaving a healthy and sustainable environment for future generations is what farming is all about. Today I'm proud to be able to share that story with all of you.
In anticipation of my appearance here today, I reached out to our members with an invitation to share their sustainability stories, along with some concrete examples of methods and practices they have used to increase productivity on their operations while protecting their viability. Our members responded resoundingly and with enthusiasm.
First and foremost, many of our members pointed to the significant research investments that farmers directly have made to improve the sector's environmental contributions. Long before any significant political pressure or policy mandates, farmers invested in sound science aimed at reducing emissions as well as their carbon footprint. The reason for this is simple: It just makes sense.
In fact, our member associations have invested millions into establishing best practices in fertilizer management so that the best possible crop yields can be achieved while minimizing the crucial inputs needed to grow them. Investments in research like this make business sense just as much as they help the environment. When expensive nitrogen, for example, is lost to the atmosphere or misapplied, it also impacts farmers' already razor-thin margins.
The innovation does not stop there. There have also been significant investments made into research on how to use nitrogen more efficiently, and how to modify genetics to allow the plant to fix its own nitrogen. This has been coupled with research on how to reduce herbicide and insecticide use, all while making the plant itself more responsive and less impactful on its own ecosystem.
While this important research continues, Canadian farmers have also been on the cutting edge with their on-farm practices to ensure that the farm is efficient, profitable and sustainable. Among the many practices that were shared with me, I would like to highlight a few critical ones. They include the adoption of variable-rate technology, or “precision agriculture”, to optimize the use of seed, fertilizer and crop protection products; the adoption of new three-tier and four-tier diesel engines in tractors as well as the use of GPS technology to prevent field overlap, reducing the amount of fuel that is used; and, of course, as Susie mentioned, the widespread adoption of conservation tillage, which creates a carbon sink while increasing organic matter in the soil.
For any of the committee members who have not yet had a chance to visit a farm that has embraced these technologies, I would encourage you to do so. It is really remarkable technology that has had incredible environmental impacts on Canadian farms across the country.
I would be remiss if I did not thank you, Mr. Chair, for visiting Saskatchewan to do just that.
The reason I mention all of this is not to say that further progress cannot be achieved. Canada's grain farmers are consistently looking for the most efficient way forward. While many of these practices have come at a cost to producers, they were adopted voluntarily in the absence of any regulatory requirement to do so. That is why it is so important that we do not lose sight of the economic viability of Canadian farms. No matter where you farm in this country, you are operating on increasingly narrower margins. In fact, this year many Canadian farmers will be planting what is likely their most expensive crop.
Consider the unprecedented cost of fuel, fertilizer and crop protection products, and the global and environmental uncertainty facing thousands of grain farmers still recovering from last year's devastating drought. To meet government and industry targets, farmers will need to continue to invest in their operations and in new technologies and equipment that will make them more efficient. Farmers will make these investments when they're confident in the economic stability and sustainability of their operations. Governments can help facilitate this by ensuring that farmers have access to predictable and reliable risk management programs like AgriInvest and AgriStability.
Another way to encourage farmers to invest in new technologies and practices is by supporting Bill and providing relief from carbon pricing on natural gas and propane used to dry grain. Rebates will not make up for the costs incurred by carbon pricing.
Grain farmers are prepared to do more, as evidenced by their track record. That is why on March 28 of this year the Grain Growers of Canada announced the creation of a climate solutions initiative to help meet Canada's ambitious goal of net-zero emissions by 2050.
The road to 2050 will propose a path forward that focuses on innovation, research and beneficial management practices. This will boost productivity while continuing to enhance soil quality, improving the carbon sequestration potential of cropland and reducing emissions.
We believe that a united approach to climate change is the strongest way forward. Rest assured, Canadian grain farmers are ready to do their part with our policy-makers and legislators as key partners. We are prepared to produce even more food while we support a growing population.
Thank you for your time today. I'll be happy to answer any questions you might have.
:
Good morning, and thank you for the opportunity to appear before this committee.
My name is Duane Thompson. I'm a beef and crop producer from Saskatchewan and the chair of the Canadian Cattlemen's Association's environment committee. I'm pleased to have CCA staff person Fawn Jackson with me today.
The last time we presented to the committee we discussed the beef industry's contribution to environmental outcomes and outlined our robust 2030 goals. As part of the discussion, we outlined the 44 million acres of grassland under the stewardship of Canadian beef producers and how we're losing this at-risk ecosystem at astonishing rates.
With that in mind, we would like to do a deeper dive into the land use within the agriculture sector, as it's the highest correlating factor to our ability to deliver on our shared environmental commitments, including climate change and biodiversity, amongst others.
Analysis by the Nature Conservancy of Canada shows that, on average over the past 25 years, roughly 148,000 acres of temperate native grasslands have been lost through conversion each year. This doesn't include the tame pastures and hay lands, which are also being lost. In fact, a recent study by Nature United identified stopping this loss as the number one solution we have for natural climate solutions.
Naturally, we have to ask, why did this happen and what do we need to do to turn this around?
There are several reasons we saw this change and shift in agriculture use. Of course, the beef industry has had its economic challenges in the past, particularly in the early 2000s, following BSE. We saw a large economic impact that led to large land use changes that were felt for many years following. However, today, despite the beef industry being in a much stronger position economically in comparison to the BSE days, we continue to see loss of grasslands directly correlated to the shrinking cow herds.
One of the key factors is that the beef industry has less ability to manage risk associated with our sector in comparison with the cropping sector. For example, on our farm, we have more effective tools to manage our crop risks than we do our beef risks. Furthermore, our crop insurance is a cost-shared premium where our beef insurance is not. This is extremely important to our young producers and families. These factors lead to business decisions where farmers and ranchers convert land from pastures to cropland or perhaps sell for other purposes.
Today, with the demand on biofuels and crop prices as they are, there are further economic reasons for people to consider switching land use. Of course, in some cases, it might make sense to switch land use and we certainly want to leave it up to our private landholders to be able to make those decisions. However, we, along with our conservation partners, as you've previously heard, understand the immense environmental value that goes with keeping grasslands in production in Canada, such as carbon sequestration and immense biodiversity, including for species at risk.
We would suggest the development and adoption of a comprehensive land use strategy by all levels of government and stakeholders to strike a balance between urban expansion, agricultural production and environmental protection.
There are also further tools that we see as helpful to maintain grasslands, such as a national perennial forage conversion program, investments in term easements, enhancement of funding for programs that support best management practices, or programs that reward producers for carbon sequestration and biodiversity, water and wetland conservation.
In the beef industry, along with the robust membership of the Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Beef, we have ambitious 2030 goals, including maintaining 35 million acres of native grasslands and sequestering an additional 3.4 million tonnes of carbon every year. These efforts, combined with our work to reduce our greenhouse gas intensity hoofprint by 33% by 2030, which I would note is certainly on the right track with exciting new feed additives, as mentioned by the CRSB at their committee appearance, have us excited about both the environmental and economic future of the Canadian beef industry.
We in the beef industry are proud to be one of Canada's largest agriculture sectors, supporting 348,000 jobs and contributing $21.8 billion to the GDP, while conserving 44 million acres of the important grassland ecosystem that stores 1.5 billion tonnes of carbon.
We have much to offer, both to the Canadian economy and our environmental commitments, and we look forward to working with you on these shared goals.
Thank you very much for having us today. We look forward to questions.
Thank you to our witnesses for their excellent testimony.
I'm going to pose a series of questions and ask all three of you to respond. I'm going to pick up a comment from Ms. Gowriluk where you identified all of the practices that have come already voluntarily, and the emphasis here is “voluntarily”. I've heard the term previously about cross-compliance. There are environmental goals that each of you has articulated, and the government's articulated some.
My questions are this. In your testimony here, we hear you. In your engagement with AAFC and with ECCC, do you feel you've been heard? What would be your comments on a linkage? We are moving into the year where we're negotiating the cap, going forward. What are your comments on cross-linking environmental goals and BRM goals?
Let's begin maybe with Grain Growers, please.
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Certainly. Thank you very much for the question, Mr. Epp.
With response to the first part of your question in terms of whether or not we feel we've been heard, I think that grain growers across the country wanted to be seen as active participants in this important discussion. That's why we made the announcement we did on March 28 of the road to 2050. That's our way of saying that we can be a solutions provider and want to work closely with our government partners to ensure that the policies and programs that are developed in this space reflect the best interests of Canadian grain farmers.
At the same time, we want to ensure that they're practical and can be applied, because to Ms. Miller's point, some of those practices or the programs that are currently being funded don't necessarily make sense on farms across the country. This is our way of saying that we're going to have some solid recommendations with respect to what you can expect from Canadian grain farmers, and we want to be a part of those discussions.
I think with respect to the second part of your question on cross-compliance, we think it's really important that, while we're having this conversation about what more Canadian farmers can and are willing to do in this space with respect to their environmental contributions—that's critical—we don't want to see that become criteria for or a barrier to entry with respect to the risk management programs that are so fundamentally critical to Canadian farmers across the country, especially at a time when they're facing unprecedented risks.
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Chair and Mr. Epp, I didn't know that you could do that. I guess we have a cede bank here.
Thank you to our witnesses, both virtual and in person, for being here. I was taking notes feverishly.
I will start with Ms. Miller from the Canadian Roundtable for Sustainable Crops.
You touched on best practices, the ways of limiting risks. At the same time, you also touched on one size does not fit all. You said that no till in the west is easier than the east. You said that cover crops are harder if the ground freezes.
What is that balance? How can we strike the balance so that we can have best practices shared, but at the same time focus on regions? What are those challenges, and what are the solutions you're doing?
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I think you have a good understanding of the fact that the grassland is an important ecosystem and provides so much value to the greater economy and society in general.
Number one, we have to figure out a way to promote the stabilization and prevent the conversion from further conversion because, as I mentioned, we're losing it at an alarming rate. If we had programs that perhaps showed the value of the carbon sequestration that's happening on those grasslands, then producers like me could look at that and, rather than seeding that piece of land that might not grow the best canola, we could leave it in forages, value that carbon and not promote the grain farming side of my operation. If that happens, if we take the forages out, there would be a huge carbon release, which would happen on the natural lands as well.
We have to have ways and programming that can effectively support and promote grasslands to be maintained in grasslands, just like the crop insurance and the shared premium. That would be huge, especially for our young producers, to support grasslands and beef production.
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to welcome the witnesses and thank them for being with us today to give us their precious testimony.
Mr. Thompson, I'd like to let you continue. You say that people who already have good practices in place should be included and not discouraged. Are you thinking of a measurement system that would allow us to assess the current state of farms? You say there are techniques you don't have yet to measure carbon, but according to some of the witnesses we've heard from, the technologies are evolving rapidly, so something could be put in place in the near future.
If we devised a way of measuring the current state of each piece of land, take into account the starting point of each one and encourage those who are already doing well, would that answer your question?
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Absolutely. That is a key point. We're getting very close with the technology. I understand that in the States there is some infrared type of technology. They do a balance of organic growth and some soil sampling, and then they can do it from satellite imagery. As I mentioned, the Food Water Wellness Foundation is getting some very good results and feeling pretty comfortable with the results.
Of course, it has to be cost-effective. They can't have people out punching soil samples and it's burdensome. At the end of the day, it has to be cost-effective because if we, as producers, are encouraged to do these environmental impacts and be sustainable, and we can quantify our carbon levels at an economic level, then we have to be the major benefactor of that. We can't have the aggregators and the system taking the lion's share. If we can be the benefactors of these sustainable environmental practices and show the results that we have.... On our farm alone, we have land that's almost triple the average organic matter. That's a key factor in sustainability, and so many things that go with that.
Yes, we have to work toward that research.
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So you would recommend that the committee consider what's been done in the past.
There are a lot of very interesting things in what you’re saying. One of them is that it has to be effective.
Would you recommend to the committee that this compensation system be decentralized? In other words, this system would not be included in a government‑mandated program, but rather would be tailored, on a case‑by‑case basis, with a local assessment. The starting point would be the ecological performance of the soil right now, if I can call it that. Then, after a period of time, the new performance could be measured and quantified.
I will give you my personal opinion and you can tell me if it makes sense. I would see this as a new AgriInvest program. The UPA talks about an agri‑green program. Money would be directly available to farmers in accounts. As agricultural entrepreneurs, you could use this money to implement the next environmental innovation. This way, you could continuously improve your performance, which would be continually quantified, encouraged and compensated, in order to always go further. This would all be done in a decentralized way, though.
Does it make sense?
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That's great. Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to all our witnesses. I'm going to ask a question and I'd like to hear from each of you in response.
In Australia, there are efforts well under way right now to implement a national soil strategy. It's going to set out how that country values, manages and improves its soil for the next 20 years. I like comparing Canada with Australia because, of course, we're both Commonwealth countries. We both have very similar systems of government. With their capital in Canberra, their state governments have similar devolution powers to those that our provinces have.
This is really a huge undertaking. They have done it through consultation with many different stakeholders. They want to make sure that it is prioritizing soil health, that it is empowering soil innovation and stewards, and that it's going to strengthen soil knowledge and capability.
Ms. Gowriluk, maybe I'll start with you. What are your thoughts on Australia's efforts in this regard, and do you think Canada could benefit from implementing a similar strategy where we really reach out to stakeholders so that we have a united federal effort at recognizing this as being one of our most valuable resources?
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Mr. MacGregor, thank you very much for the question.
I'm not familiar with the strategy itself, but based on what you've told me about it today, it's definitely something worth exploring. To your last point, though, it's critical that any time we look at a strategy such as this Canadian farmers across the country are part of the discussion. I think they would welcome the opportunity to do that.
That's part of what we intended to do, or are intending to do, with the Grain Growers of Canada road map to net zero by 2050. That is to have a national discussion with grain farmers across the country on areas where we have greater potential and we know we can do more—to identify those areas, provide some solid recommendations to the government and work closely with our government partners to ensure that policies and programs reflect the best interests of Canadian farmers. This is one area that we'll certainly be exploring as part of that discussion.
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There's a certain private member's bill, Bill , that you might all be interested in looking at for further research.
I thank each of you for your answers on that.
I'll turn to the Canadian Cattlemen's Association. On your website, your organization has an article posted from February 22, entitled “Curbing methane emissions will take a team effort”. It's an in-depth approach to the different feed additives that are under development, trying to reduce methane emissions from ruminants—from dairy and from beef cattle.
We also know that there is potentially promising research out there with the development of different genetic stocks and so on, which could provide some steeper long-term decreases in methane emissions.
When you look at the research, I know research takes a lot of time to get it right. However, when you look at the progress of research both in developing those feed additives and their approval for commercial use but also the different genetics, bloodlines, that might also yield some incredible results, are you happy with the way that research is progressing?
If there's any room for improvement, is there anything that our committee could specifically be recommending to the federal government on aiding that research even further? Does the federal government need to pay more attention to funding that research because of the potential it might yield in terms of an absolute reduction in our methane emissions?
First of all, Canada has 50% of the greenhouse gas footprint of the global world average. The reason we have that is that we've invested in research for a long time. In the research around 3-NOP, which is one these feed additives you're alluding to, one of the biggest studies was done in Canada. It indicates that around 70% to 80% of emissions may actually be able to be reduced.
We know that research works. We also know that we have to invest in it for a really long time. These are the foundations of all our environmental work. We need to make sure that we are not getting distracted by shiny stars over here and turning away from things that we know deliver long term. For us, it is going to be very key to continue to invest in A-base research to make sure that these tools are continuing to be developed because it takes a long time to develop them.
Thanks for that question.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for being with us this morning.
I have a question for Ms. Gowriluk.
The Parliamentary Budget Officer's report states that when the carbon tax reaches its target of $170 per tonne by 2030, it will have little effect on GHG emissions.
First of all, do you agree with this statement by the Parliamentary Budget Officer?
On the other hand, there are two options: either the money is refunded or the carbon tax is removed completely for propane and natural gas. What do you think would be the difference between those two options? What's your point of view on that?
:
Thank you very much for the question, Mr. Lehoux.
With respect to the first part of your question, we have to bear in mind that the carbon tax is applied to natural gas and propane used for drying grain. At this point, farmers have no alternative but to use fossil fuels. That's why we continue to support the passage of the private member's Bill . I think there's acknowledgement from this government that the objective intended with that particular policy is not being achieved.
On your second point with respect to developing this rebate program that was established, ultimately the intention of the rebate was to return 100% of the funds collected from Canadian farmers and ranchers back to Canadian farmers and ranchers. What we've seen is that, while all of that money may be going out the door, the rebate is not equitable in terms of its approach to distribution. Some of our directors have quantified what they're going to be getting back in the form of a rebate. In some cases, what they'll be getting back in the form of a rebate is still below 40% of what they ultimately paid in carbon taxes.
I think there's acknowledgement from this government that the tax that's being applied is not fair and that it's not ultimately reaching its intended objective. That's why our sector continues to support the passage of Bill as the most efficient way to ensure that Canadian grain farmers, who have no alternative but to use natural gas and propane to dry their grain, do so at no additional cost, especially when you consider all of the unprecedented costs that they are currently facing.
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Certainly I think we would support that vision, as reflected in our commitment to the road to 2050. This road map that we're looking to develop has been done before.
It would look very similar in its approach to the one that was developed by farmers in the United Kingdom. That is, it would provide concrete recommendations that are developed by farmers to provide government with clear direction on, first, where greater potential exists—where Canadian farmers know they can do more—and, second, what some of the barriers are to uptake. For example, why don't we see more western Canadian farmers practising cover cropping? What can we do to incentivize that practice? Is there greater investment in research required, for example?
Providing government with that direction in terms of where funds, policies and programs should be directed is the intention of the road map, ultimately, as is having farmers at the centre of that conversation.
Ms. Gowriluk, on Bill the discussions are going to be very similar to what we had in the previous Parliament with Bill . I remember that when that bill was before committee we had witnesses, people who were involved in the technology, and they said that anything to replace propane and natural gas was probably at least 10 years off to be commercially viable.
We also had a witness who appeared for this current study who warned our committee against systems that may take leftover plant residue, crop residue, off the fields to use that as a fuel source, because it is very important, she said, for increasing the carbon in the soil.
No matter which way you look at it, there's a trade-off.
From your members' perspective, have any of your members started using alternative systems? Do they want to see the federal government put more research into this? I know that even with natural gas prices, with or without the carbon tax, that can still be a very volatile fuel source on international markets, so that stability won't always be there as much as farmers would like.
Please give us what comments you have on that.
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Absolutely. Thank you very much for the question.
As outlined in my initial comments, when we had an opportunity to survey our members in preparation for today's appearance, it was really all about efficiency and about cost savings. Many of the practices they've adopted make good environmental sense, but they just make good business sense. If you have an alternative to natural gas and propane, which is increasingly expensive, farmers would look to adopt that, but it has to offer cost savings and it has to be efficient.
To your question with respect to whether many of our farmers, or any of our farmers, who dry grain are currently using an alternative to natural gas and propane, the answer would be no. It simply doesn't exist yet.
I think that's why you see sector-wide support, even beyond grain growers, for Bill , because we recognize that it's not going to achieve its policy intent, which is to encourage a practice change and for Canadian farmers to use alternative fuel sources, which are simply not available right now for the purposes of grain drying.
:
Thank you, Ms. Gowriluk.
Thank you, Mr. MacGregor. Unfortunately, that's time. That concludes our first panel.
Colleagues, I don't do it often, but I'm going to ask a quick question of Mr. Thompson.
I recognize you're from Saskatchewan and I had the privilege of being there a couple of weeks ago. I visited one of your colleagues, Scott Greiner, near Indian Head.
It was eye-opening, of course, when talking about land management and some of the pressures that are on farmers in terms of what crops to bring forward. Some farms are mixed, but we know that commodities are through the roof right now. He talked about some of the sloughs and some of the wetlands that exist and how's there's an inherent pressure to make them even more maximized from a crop perspective.
The government had announced some programs around wetland preservation. We know there have been partnerships with Ducks Unlimited. Can you speak to whether those programs are landing for farmers, whether it be cattle farmers like yourself or perhaps crop farmers?
Are those programs working and how can we expedite them, particularly with some of the pressures that are being faced to preserve those wetlands and grasslands?
:
Thank you, Mr. Thompson.
Colleagues, thank you for the brief indulgence.
Thank you to our witnesses. Ms. Miller, Ms. Gowriluk, Mr. Thompson and Ms. Jackson, thank you for your time today.
Colleagues, we're going to take a very brief moment to get our new witnesses in, and then we're going to get right to it so that we can try to get some time for questions.
:
Colleagues, welcome back.
Thank you, Madam Clerk, for the quick changeover with our witnesses.
We're going to get right to opening statements so that we can get to questions, particularly with the impending vote.
Today I'm pleased to be able to welcome Eric Toensmeier, who is the director of the Perennial Agriculture Institute, which I believe is connected with Yale University, although it's not in my notes; Dr. Rod MacRae, who serves at the faculty of environmental and urban change at York University; and Mr. Ryan Cullen, who is a small-scale and urban agriculture entrepreneur at City of Greens farm.
Each of you will have five minutes for opening remarks and we will get right to that.
Mr. Toensmeier, I'll start with you, for five minutes.
:
Thank you, honourable members.
I hope today to share my experience as a former senior fellow for Project Drawdown and researcher on agricultural climate change mitigation. My knowledge relates to science and practices rather than policy. That part I will leave to you.
Climate change is kind of like an overflowing kitchen sink. Emissions are the water flowing from the faucet, which is now pouring onto the floor. The first thing to do is to turn off the faucet. That's reducing emissions, turning off the faucet. The next thing is to mop up the wet floor. This is carbon sequestration. Both are necessary, and neither is enough alone.
In the area of agriculture, we have several approaches to mitigation.
The first is to demand reduction, for example, reducing food waste and shifting diets to foods with low emissions and low land demand, although food can have positive or negative effects depending on how it is produced.
Next is reducing emissions from agricultural production itself.
Third is to remove excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it in soils and biomass, a process called carbon sequestration. Increasing productivity on the farmland we have can help to reduce deforestation pressure elsewhere, a process called sustainable intensification.
Finally, the supply chain is a significant source of emissions, including transport, processing, retail and more.
Each approach is important, and together they can have a powerful impact.
According to FAO, Canada's top five sources of agricultural emissions are land conversion, farming on peat soils, on-farm energy use, enteric fermentation from the digestion of cattle and other ruminant livestock, and synthetic fertilizers.
Canada has a powerful tool kit of mitigation practices to draw on. I love seeing the agricultural climate solutions grants program that targets cover crops, nutrient management, shelterbelts and rotational grazing. These are all excellent priorities.
A number of additional tools are available to address your key emission sources like limiting land conversion, re-wetting peatland soils, on-farm energy conservation and using forages with high tannin levels to reduce methane. Returning sovereignty of forest land to indigenous people is also a powerful tool for protecting forest carbon.
When it comes to carbon sequestration, it's important to note that some practices have a much higher per acre impact than others. They're not all equal. Generally speaking, the more trees, the more carbon. This is why agroforestry practices that integrate trees with crops and/or livestock are especially powerful.
Carbon sequestration has other limits as well. It does slow down dramatically after several decades, and the carbon that is held can be re-released by climate disasters or a return to the previous farming practices.
To come back to the notion of the overflowing sink, the bucket for the mop is only so large, and it can be knocked over. Carbon sequestration is essential, but isn't the only approach we should take.
While many emission reduction practices are new and were created just for mitigation, this is not true for carbon sequestration. These practices were developed because they're good for the farm and/or the surrounding environment. They offer many co-benefits like climate change adaptation, which is critical because, while no farm on its own can mitigate all of climate change, every farm must be resilient to the new conditions in which they're farming.
Canadian farmers are facing increased rainfall intensity, which exacerbates erosion. Many of these carbon sequestration practices reduce erosion, and all of them improve soil organic matter, which greatly enhances soil water-holding capacity for drought resilience, among other benefits.
The proposed private member's bill, Bill would create a national strategy to greatly accelerate the adoption of practices that sequester soil carbon and assist farmers to adapt to our changing climate.
Thank you once again, and I welcome the opportunity to answer any questions.
:
Thanks very much for the opportunity to appear before you today.
I urge the committee to examine how to improve our policy execution. We have an implementation problem in the Canadian food and agriculture system as it relates to environmental improvement. It's a decades-old problem. It cuts across all levels of government, all governing parties, elected and unelected officials, and their systems. Nobody seems to want to address it and I'm hoping you will. Given what's in play and the potential of Canadian agriculture to contribute to environmental sustainability, this seems to be a moment for change.
We do have many good aspirations and policy statements, and in some cases we have very good targets, but the instruments that we're using will not permit us to meet the sustainability goals we've set out for the food and agriculture sector. All the main programs for environmental sustainability and agriculture suffer from the same kinds of deficiencies. This includes the Canadian agricultural partnership, the on-farm climate change fund and climate change solutions. These problems are essentially that they're largely voluntary, focus on grants or contribution agreements and are not targeted. They focus on best management practices and not systems change. They focus on the supply side without demand-side elements, and they have limited transition planning associated with them.
These instruments are not adequate for the scale of our challenges. We have to improve our instrument choices, our designs, application and integration. I elaborate on more suitable designs on my research website. The clerk has the link to that site.
Thanks for inviting me, again, and I look forward to the discussion.
:
Good day, and thank you for the opportunity to speak today.
My name's Ryan Cullen. I manage a small-scale—in our case, 10 acres—diversified farm. We predominately grow market garden vegetables intensively, but are integrating small-scale livestock systems and small fruit and nut tree systems in a rural and peri-urban context. I've also designed and managed a small-scale, high-tech and high-yield urban farm in an academic setting at our local college, while also learning and getting training from some of the leading small-scale and regenerative farmers around the world. I'm focused on demonstrating the viability of small-scale, regenerative agriculture farms, teaching and training a new generation of farmers and growers and redefining the paradigms in horticulture, food and farming and how they connect to our everyday life.
Regardless of the context of any of these farms, I want to stress the importance of how some of them are being managed.
On our farm, we plan and manage our farm holistically following regenerative farming principles, meaning we consider how our resource base, our decisions, our production systems and outcomes not only affect our bottom line but also positively affect our environment and the people in our community. Regenerative agriculture is all about managing holistically, so we make decisions that are not just based on economics but include the social and environmental impacts and outcomes as well.
Building soil, as we've heard through many of the speakers today, is an important part as well. It has the power to sequester carbon, cycle nutrients and produce life. We focus on systems that improve soil health, not destroy it, whether it be no-till cover crop systems, not spraying herbicides and pesticides, or using organic inputs.
We try to mimic ecosystem processes, understanding how nature functions in wholes, recognizing natural laws and patterns in nature and how we can use nature to create a niche for our production systems and our economies, and integrating these laws, patterns and systems into our production systems and our everyday farm business. We strive to use local inputs for local outputs, capitalizing on circular economies using wastes, particularly our own, as resources, and integrating our systems so the inputs for the farm come from the farm.
We focus on mobile, scalable infrastructure that's low tech, innovative, energy efficient and useful technology applied with low capital costs and minimal fossil fuel use. We're investing in management and information, not expensive infrastructure with high capital costs.
Our model's direct-to-consumer sales and certified by our customers. We very much meet and exceed organic standards, but don't believe we should have to pay for certification to demonstrate we have safe and high-quality products. We maintain transparency about what we do and how we do it by inviting the public and our customers to be part of the experience, to see how their food's grown, to understand how we do it and educate people on where their food is coming from, trying to put the farm at the centre of the community and making it an integral part of the social fabric.
We're ecologically, socially and economically regenerative. We're attempting to build up multiple forms of capital, not just economic forms. We're trying to create a resource base in harmony with nature, society and ourselves that's sustainable, viable and resilient. If farms are going to be regenerative, we need to work to a triple bottom line that works to keep our business, the regeneration of the land and our customer satisfaction in equal consideration.
What we need in agriculture are production systems at various scales fit to their context. Whether it's 1,000 acres in Saskatchewan or a quarter-acre in the city, we need integrated systems that permeate the social fabric of our lives, produce high-quality food for people and grow it locally with local labour accessible and convenient to the local population. We need systems that regenerate our landscape, cities and countryside and are integrated into the communities, economies and environments we're living in today.
Production systems that are viable agricultural models and use useful technologies already exist and are being practised. We need to promote these systems and models and promote local inputs and outputs, create local jobs from a skilled local workforce and integrate these systems into our local communities and economies. We need to take a holistic approach that is regenerative, and that's what we're trying to do.
Thank you.
:
Yes, there's a transition framework that usually has to be applied to any kind of change process. Part of our challenge is that we often don't use transition thinking. The idea here is that we start with relatively straightforward changes that improve the efficiency of the processes broadly speaking. That's just the first stage, because what we have to do in the longer term is start to substitute certain kinds of processes and practices for ones that aren't working very well.
The third stage, the redesign stage, is where we're really taking a lot of ecological ideas, and my colleagues on the panel have spoken to some of these dimensions. We're using those ecological principles and practices to redesign the way our various systems are working. It's really a three-stage process.
Obviously the substitution stage is more complex and takes longer to implement. Redesign is more complex again, but if we're thinking in transition terms from the very beginning, then it's easier to imagine how things might unfold in a reasonably evolutionary way without too much disruption.
:
I think we need to have transition advisory services all across the country. Obviously the provinces have a big role to play in this, but, because of the Canadian agricultural partnership, there's an opportunity for the federal government, especially at this stage of negotiations, to promote and help to fund these transitional advisory services. They work very effectively in Europe. That's a key piece.
I think the sustainable diet scenario that my colleague on the panel has mentioned is also very important. In other words, farmers want to be producing things that consumers will want to eat, and if consumers are asking for things that fit into a sustainable diet scenario, that will obviously be a market-based kind of incentive.
Another thing that I think is going to be very important down the road and that has also been used very effectively in other jurisdictions is transition payments because, for a lot of growers, the transition period is the most financially risky. To help finance that transition phase while they're taking advantage of these transition advisory services is another key dimension of the process.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for joining us today to give us their important testimony.
Mr. MacRae, I'd like to let you continue, because you're on to something good. You just mentioned that there aren't enough incentives, that the transition will be long-term and that incentives need to be maintained.
I don't know if you heard what was said during the first panel. If every innovation made on farms were rewarded with an amount of money that would be available to farmers as entrepreneurs, farmers could use that money to implement a future innovation. In this way, the aim would be to constantly improve environmental performance. Do you think this would be a good model?
Any kinds of incentives we can offer to farmers.... As Mr. Toensmeier said, every farm is different; every context is different. If there is a general set of practices that can be outlined in a framework from within which to operate, then, I think, farmers like me can identify certain practices and be contributing certain practices, and then be rewarded for them.
What's important, too, is some sort of green-tape cutting to make it easier for farmers like me to erect greenhouses in certain municipalities or use different types of innovations and infrastructure that might not otherwise be recognized, allow it to be more easily implemented without the costs of permits and regulations and things like that, and give farmers more creativity and more opportunities in different contexts, especially someone like me, who farms in an urban and peri-urban context.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. I'll repeat my colleagues by thanking all of our witnesses for aiding us in this study.
Mr. Toensmeier, I'd like to start with you.
I really appreciated your sink analogy with respect to climate change—the faucet and also the spillover on the floor. I think we acknowledge that agriculture's greatest role is probably in acting as a mop, in trying to sequester the excess carbon that we've put into the atmosphere.
I appreciate the shout-out to my Bill . I really took a lot of inspiration from what Australia is doing. They have older soils there, generally, which are not very high in carbon content, and they are losing billions of dollars' worth of farm production every year due to erosion. It was turning into a real national crisis there. I also like how they are going to establish the office of a soils advocate, someone who can be in a position to keep pressure on the government and act as a nexus for public opinion but also for stakeholder relations, to continue to push those policies.
You've authored a book called The Carbon Farming Solution. I've read that book. I've seen many examples of what other countries are doing. With respect to agroforestry and all of the examples that you've included in that book, for the benefit of our committee, I was wondering if you could talk about other countries, apart from Australia.
What are some of the notable countries that are putting these practices into amazing effect that we could perhaps study and learn from?
:
The first one would be France. It has really been leading the way in research and development and agroforestry, and it has a national commitment to convert a million and a half acres of cropland to agroforestry over the next decade or two.
Another outstanding example until recently was Brazil, where all of the public schools were required to buy at least 30% of their food from farms that were part of agroforestry using a sustainable production method.
I really appreciate what's being done in Mexico. Ranchers who have been subsidized by the federal government because they haven't been producing efficiently, profitably, have been provided the finances to convert to a silvopasture system, in which they integrate trees. This greatly intensifies production there. They have two to 10 times a higher stocking rate in these intensive silvopasture systems, lower emissions and higher carbon sequestration, after which the farmers don't need subsidies anymore, because they've become more profitable.
Those are a few examples.
As well, there is Australia. There is much to be learned from efforts there. One of my favourite things is that they were addressing savannah burning by changing the time of year in which savannahs are burned, and actually rewarding, recognizing, appreciating and financing the indigenous communities there who used to manage much of Australia with fire in that fashion and bringing them into their carbon payment scheme. I think Australia is a great model for Canada in many ways.
:
Thank you. It's a great question.
Typically, there are not a lot of incentives in terms of funding or access to funds, especially for small-scale growers. A lot of the programs developed by government or to access capital are typically for larger-scale farms.
For the small-scale grower or bio-intensive grower, there are not a lot of avenues and ways in which to access funds or capital to get started. Getting access to land for someone like me, who doesn't come from a traditional farming background or a farming family, is also very difficult. The high capitalization involved with buying land and real estate and getting a farm going is very difficult. If there were ways to access capital for smaller-scale growers to start some of these bio-intensive farms, that would be super.
Thank you, Mr. MacGregor.
Colleagues, the bells have started ringing. As we agreed on previously, I'll let us go about 15 minutes, and then we'll release so that folks have time to vote in person.
I will go to the second round, but we're going to keep it to four minutes for both the Conservatives and the Liberals, and two minutes for the Bloc and the NDP.
I think it might be Mr. Epp, for four minutes, if you'd like the additional time.
:
For us, it's our immediate community. In Durham region—if you're familiar, you know—there's Oshawa, Ajax and Pickering. For us, that's local.
Depending on where we are in our municipality, we try to serve our community within our region. There are a few million people. Our small farm on 10 acres can only really serve 150 of them. What we need is more small-scale farms in our context, so that we can serve more people and make farming the centre of the community.
I'd like to see more farms that are urban, peri-urban and integrating the rural, traditional agriculture with more urban, small-scale, bio-intensive farms right in the city, so that instead of driving to Costco and big box superstores, they can get access to local produce from local farms, and it's right on their doorsteps.
As I mentioned before, I don't come from a farming background. I grew up in the city, but I was travelling the world and working in Thailand on a number of permaculture projects. Actually, Mr. Toensmeier's book, Edible Forest Gardens, was a big inspiration in my life.
I started out of general interest, and I took my teaching skills and went back to college. One of my biggest platforms for starting my farm was that we had a great horticulture food and farming program at our local college. I think if we have more institutions like that developing, teaching and training people like me, who can get into this field with the proper skill set, that's a big thing. I would certainly champion it.
For your second question, we very much focus on cover crops, soil building, cycling nutrients on our farm, catching and storing water and reusing it, creating our own input from our own waste, feeding our chickens excess produce from the gardens, and integrating livestock systems into our soil generation. As I said, we're catching and storing nutrients as much as we can and trying to mimic nature, mimicking forest ecosystems and applying them in our annual and perennial production systems. That's what we do.
:
Thank you, Mr. MacGregor. I apologize.
Thank you, Mr. Toensmeier.
We are at time, folks.
Thank you to our witnesses, Mr. Toensmeier, Mr. Cullen and Mr. MacRae, for your excellent testimony here today.
Colleagues, we will be back on Thursday to continue our draft consideration of the supply chain in agriculture report. We'll see everyone on Thursday.
Thank you to all those involved. Take care. We're going to adjourn.