The Agriculturral Adaptation Council is hosting a gathering of people and organizations interested in envisioning the future of Ontario agriculture.
It will be Sept. 17 at the Brock Hotel in Niagara Falls.
It will be an ideal setting for industry leaders to network, much as used to happen at the annual federal agriculture department’s outlook conferences in Ottawa.
The conference fits with the AAC’s broader Agri Food 2050 Initiative which is a multi-year effort to identify and act on long-term priorities for Ontario’s agri food sector.
The conference will explore the big-picture trends shaping the industry’s future: land use pressures, climate change, evolving technologies, labour and demographic shifts and more.
“Ontario’s agriculture and agri-food stakeholders have unique insights and talents to help society collectively respond to disruption and create a future for our next generation,” said AAC board member Ruth Knight who is chair of the Agri-Food 2050 committee.
“The Agri-Food 2050 initiative is an invitation to all members of our industry to come together proactively and help create a vision of what we’d like that future of our sector to be.”
The event will feature:
• Sector-wide dialogue on the most pressing long-term challenges and opportunities;
• Interactive sessions to help shape future programming and policy;
• Cross-sector networking to spark collaboration and innovation, and
• Launch of vision-to-action working groups that will continue the conversation well beyond the event.
To lay the groundwork, the AAC established a Foresight Working Group to envision three possibilities for how the agriculture and food sector might look in 2050: an optimistic future outlook, a future that maintains the status quo, and a pessimistic future scenario.
The Working Group also identified five key change drivers that will influence how the future unfolds: economics, environment and resources, social factors, innovation and technology, and policy and capacity for change.
This is AAC’s 30th anniversary.
It has more than 60 member organizations.