The federal agriculture department’s cuts to research stations and budgets threatens irreparable harm, says Phil Mount, vice-president of policy for the National Farmers Union.
In January, the federal government announced it plans to close seven agriculture research stations in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia, end the Organic and Regenerative Research program, and to terminate 12 per cent of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada personnel - 665 researchers, technicians and support staff.
Earlier this month, the Parliamentary Agriculture Committee unanimously recommended the government "pause and reverse the decision to close agricultural research centres and experimental farm sites."
The cost of these closures will set back public agricultural research for decades, Mount said.
A partial financial analysis has revealed the government stands to save only $23.2 million per year over 10 years, he said.
These savings do not account for the costs of relocation, divestiture, and decommissioning. Nor do they account for the losses from not doing the research, he said.
For example, studies of publlc plant breeding regularly find returns of $30 for every dollar invested, he said.
“The math is simple. And the damage is clear.
“If we want resilient farms that can adapt to the ongoing climate crisis, we need to continue funding public agricultural research centres. What we refuse to invest in today, we’ll pay for tomorrow,” the National Farmers Union said.