Thursday, February 26, 2026

Wheat breeding program seen at risk


 

Federal government budget cuts are putting Canada’s wheat breeding programs at risk, said the Canadian Wheat Research Coalition in its review of the Canadian wheat breeding innovation system.


It said the budget cuts the government has already made are especially risky for “the variety development and pre-market evaluation stages.”


And it said federal government agriculture wheat research “is an integral part” of wheat development.


“Wheat breeding is a long-term process and decisions made today will impact agriculture decades into the future,” and coalition’s report said.


“It’s clear that the status quo is not a viable path forward,” says CWRC chair Jocelyn Velestuk, the coalition’s chair and a farmer from  Broadview, Saskatchewan. 


“Our system has been incredibly productive for farmers and for the sector but it’s no longer working. Securing the future of wheat in Canada requires a reimagining of our wheat breeding innovation system,” she said.


Historically, farmer investment in wheat breeding has paid major dividends. Farmers received $33 in benefits for every dollar they invested in wheat breeding from 1995 to 2020, according to a recent study from the University of Saskatchewan. Since 2020, the coalition has committed $70.5 million to western Canadian wheat breeding programs.


“Western Canadian farmers are invested in the future of wheat breeding in Canada,” Velestuk said. “We must create a path forward that addresses research gaps, delivers field-ready varieties and protects our long-term investments.” 


I wonder how the return on federal subsidies compares with the research benefits. And why farm organizations lobby so hard for the subsidies and say so little about research budget cuts.

PED in Perth County

 

Swine Health Ontario reported an outbreak of porcine epidemic diarrhea virus at a hog finishing barn in Perth County.

 

U.S. farmers support CUSMA


 

Farmers for Free Trade is pushing back on United States President Donald Trump’s musings that separate trade deals with Canada and Mexico might be better than the Canada-U.S-Mexico (CUSMA) agreement which is up for review beginning in July.


Farmers for Free Trade is an umbrella organization for U.S. farmers.


Speaking on “AgriTalk” from the Commodity Classic meeting, Farmers for Free Trade executive director Brian Kuehle said renewing and strengthening the CUSMA is one of the most important trade priorities facing the Trump administration.


At the same time, Trump’s chief negotiator said any new deal will include tariffs.


Trump has hit Canadian steel, aluminum and autos with 25 per cent tariffs, but has exempted most Canadian products from new tariffs because they are covered by CUSMA

Veterinary subsidy program twigged

 


Ontario is twigging its Veterinary Assistance Program to include registered veterinary technicians and telemedicine services beginning April 1.

Northern Economic Development and Growth Minister George Pirie said the redesign is an important first step in strengthening the program.

There is a nine per cent increase in call rates and a 30-cents-per kilometre increase in travel allowances. Coverage is extended to telemedicine.

Bees and fish are also added to coverage.

Jason Leblond, president of Beef Farmers of Ontario, said the extensions are a critical step toward bridging the gap in ensuring beef farmers have reliable access to critical veterinary care services.

“For our sector to thrive, beef farmers need access to large animal veterinary care,” he said. “Ensuring access to veterinary services for beef farmers across Northern Ontario and other rural regions of the province has been a top priority for our association.”

Elise Wickett, Ontario Association of Registered Veterinary Technicians, said covering registered veterinary technicians’ call travel costs and telemedicine will be particularly impactful for Northern Ontario.

Loblaws sales stall, profits soar


 

Loblaws reported fourth-quarter profits of $646 million compared with $462 million for the same quarter last year.


But same-store sales inched up by only 1.5 per cent, far less than the rate of food inflation.


Yet Loblaws’ revenues increased from $14.78 billon to $16.38 billion for the quarter because it opened scores of new discount stores such as No Frills.


The company told investors that it plans to continue opening new discount stores, but this year it will open even more new Shoppers Drug Mart stores. 

It said there has been a shift in consumer demand to lower-priced items such as its President’s Choice and No Name products that compete with brand names and from organic fruits and vegetables to lower-priced conventionally-grown produce.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Organic acids and essential oils counter Salmonella


 

A team of four European researchers has found that containing organic acids and essential oils in capsules can control Salmonella bacteria that threaten piglets at weaning.


The capsules could replace antibiotics.


inclusion level of two kilograms per tonne of feed significantly reduced Salmonella Typhimurium after five minutes they found. This observed similar results with other serovars of Salmonella and E. coli.


The capsules carry the contents deeper into the piglets' guts.


The research was reported on the pig333.com website.


Another report on the website said tannic acid added to rations for early-weaned piglets could also reduce bacterial diseases and improve feed efficiency and rate of gain.


Their trial of three different rates found that the group receiving 0.05 per cent tannic acid showed increased body weight, daily gain and feed intake along with lower feed-to-gain ratio and incidence of diarrhea.

Al Mussel hopes to spark discussions about supply management

Canada’s supply management for dairy and poultry is obviously going to spark tensions during upcoming trade talks with the United States and Mexico, so agricultural economist Al Mussel is challenging Canadians to ponder the costs and benefits of supply management.

He said public perceptions have been slanted towards losses of efficiency, higher food prices, entitled farmers and akwardness in Canadian foreign policy and trade.


“But we did not just fall into supply management. Supply management presented a bold intervention to address a range of market distortions and failures,” he wrote.


It was iinitially controversial among those most directly impacted, and challenging to carry out. As with any regulation, its impact should be understood and evaluated in the context of market failures and distortions it was developed as a mechanism to address and on relative rather than absolute merits,” he wrote in a paper published by Agri-Food Economic Systems.


He said the context leading up to supply management was strong demand for cheese and dairy products for England fighting a war, but when the war ended, so did export contracts and the Canadian market was left with more than could be sold at prices that covered milk production costs.


At the same time, technologies such as artificial insemination and continuous butter churns were unsettling the industry.


Most farms were small and diverse, so there was little incentive to stop keeping a few milk cows. But with processors consolidating into larger facilities with modern technology, the balance of market power shifted against farmers.


Fluid milk processors favoured larger-scale farms close to their processing plant, leaving smaller-scale farmers in remote areas at a distinct disadvantage.


The government offered support prices for butter and skim milk powder, imposed tariff protections and export subsidies.


Although Mussel does not mention it, the costs of this dairy policy bothered the federal politicians who were ready for new ideas, such as supply management. They could also see the benefits that farmers contracted to fluid milk processors enjoyed because they provided a steady volume of high-quality milk in all seasons – i.e. supply management.


The egg, chicken and turkey farmers noticed how well supply management worked for dairy farmers and lobbied for similar supply management.


Mussels’ paper delves into economic models to illustrate how the system can distort markets and he also examines the impact of recent developments such as lower-cost cheese production and the split in the chicken market between dark and white meats.


While it’s tempting to believe that the trends to larger-scale and better-managed farms and new technologies should make supply management no longer necessary, Mussel notes that there are significant risks.


The farms and processing plants in the United States are much larger and could swamp the Canadian market. 


On the other hand, anything that wipes out the large operations – eg. a contaminated ingredient in infant formulas or highly-pathogenic avian influenza wiping out multi-million-bird farms is disruptive to markets.


In conclusion, Mussel wrote that “a better understanding of the purpose of supply managed systems in Canada, designed to solve critical

and persistent economic problems in agricultural,  marketing, should facilitate a more balanced view. 


"The threats of legacy economic problems, now well over 50 years old, have not disappeared- they can come back.


“We cannot simply trade the system away, nor chip away at its institutions, without also forgoing its benefits- in

terms of persistent problems resolved- and without incurring unknown costs to replace it with alternative policy measures with unknown efficacy.”