It has been interesting to get several
farm news pieces every day with
predictions as to cow numbers in the US
and Canada. Both countries are going
through liquidation, with predictions
that Canada is ahead and will slow down
the liquidation but that the US has
several more years of downsizing to go.
Without profitability I think Canada can
easily continue to drop and at some
point fall under the 4,000,000 cow
number. Oligopoly of processors aside,
this does create the issue of balancing
supply and demand.
This creates a variety of questions and
an ethical dilemma in my mind...
1. Does this create a unique opportunity
for Canadian producers who can hold on
to be at the front of the wave of price
recovery?
2. Does this create a glut of cheap
livestock feed in Canada (not enough
cows to use the poor crops) or does
ethanol use that up?
3. Does this drop the cowherd to a size
where only 1 processor is interested in
operating here? (potentially worse than
even the current scenario)
4. We know the domestic market is the
most profitable, should that be the size
of the Canadian industry?
5. Is it socially responsible to
a) not sell food to the global
marketplace when we have a tremendous
abundance of renewable resources (land
and water beyond our ability to eat all
the food produced) and a large
population seeking nourishment?
b) somehow grow our Canadian population
by leaps and bounds (move the people to
the food, vs the food to the people)?
6. Does option 5b) create the exact same
ecological disaster that the original
settlement plan did (see the dirty
thirties as an example)?
7. Does "right sizing" responsibly use
and improve our Canadian resource base
(in my mind this means optimizing food
production, clean air, water and
improving soils and ecosystems)?
I have been thinking about this issue a
lot lately and I would be interested to
see perspectives on what is the "right
size" for Canada. The only way I can
see long term sustainability is matching
production to demand, but that is a very
simplistic approach in my mind. Maybe
we need to shrink back to domestic size
and then build forward from that point
with a different mindset. Anyway...
farm news pieces every day with
predictions as to cow numbers in the US
and Canada. Both countries are going
through liquidation, with predictions
that Canada is ahead and will slow down
the liquidation but that the US has
several more years of downsizing to go.
Without profitability I think Canada can
easily continue to drop and at some
point fall under the 4,000,000 cow
number. Oligopoly of processors aside,
this does create the issue of balancing
supply and demand.
This creates a variety of questions and
an ethical dilemma in my mind...
1. Does this create a unique opportunity
for Canadian producers who can hold on
to be at the front of the wave of price
recovery?
2. Does this create a glut of cheap
livestock feed in Canada (not enough
cows to use the poor crops) or does
ethanol use that up?
3. Does this drop the cowherd to a size
where only 1 processor is interested in
operating here? (potentially worse than
even the current scenario)
4. We know the domestic market is the
most profitable, should that be the size
of the Canadian industry?
5. Is it socially responsible to
a) not sell food to the global
marketplace when we have a tremendous
abundance of renewable resources (land
and water beyond our ability to eat all
the food produced) and a large
population seeking nourishment?
b) somehow grow our Canadian population
by leaps and bounds (move the people to
the food, vs the food to the people)?
6. Does option 5b) create the exact same
ecological disaster that the original
settlement plan did (see the dirty
thirties as an example)?
7. Does "right sizing" responsibly use
and improve our Canadian resource base
(in my mind this means optimizing food
production, clean air, water and
improving soils and ecosystems)?
I have been thinking about this issue a
lot lately and I would be interested to
see perspectives on what is the "right
size" for Canada. The only way I can
see long term sustainability is matching
production to demand, but that is a very
simplistic approach in my mind. Maybe
we need to shrink back to domestic size
and then build forward from that point
with a different mindset. Anyway...
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