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    Conservative Ag Policy

    Silverback;

    Here is the real meal deal!

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    December 21, 2005

    Harper to replace CAIS and boost ethanol and biodiesel

    Conservatives will invest an additional $500 million in farm support programs



    CHATHAM – Conservative Leader Stephen Harper today announced that a Conservative government will replace the Canadian Agricultural Income Stabilization Program (CAIS) with a new income stabilization program, and introduce a separate disaster relief program, adding $500 million a year to farm support programs. A Conservative government will also require five per cent renewable content such as ethanol and biodiesel in gasoline and diesel fuels by 2010.

    “The Conservative Party cares deeply about agriculture because this party has deep roots throughout rural Canada,” Harper said. “Standing up for Canada means standing up for a strong, vibrant farm sector that provides security of income to families dependent on farming, and food security for Canadian families.”

    A Conservative government will:

    · Replace CAIS with separate farm income stabilization and disaster relief programs. The new income stabilization program will be a simpler, more responsive program that properly addresses the cost of production, market revenue, and inventory evaluation. The federal government should be ready to pitch in when disaster strikes, funding disaster relief separately, above and beyond its income stabilization program;

    · Commit an additional $500 million annually to farm support programs;

    · Continue with the $755 million in emergency assistance to grain and oilseed producers announced on November 23, 2005, and ensure that this money reaches farmers as quickly as possible;

    · Ensure that agricultural industries that choose to operate under domestic supply management remain viable. Canada needs efficient production planning, market-based returns to producers, and predictable imports to operate domestic supply management systems;

    · Give western grain farmers the freedom to make their own marketing and transportation decisions. Western grain farmers should be able to participate voluntarily in the Canadian Wheat Board;

    · Defend Canada’s agricultural sectors when negotiating international trade agreements. A Conservative government will seek better market access for Canadian agricultural and agri-food products in foreign markets. We will support the phased reduction of all trade-distorting barriers and the rapid elimination of all agriculture export subsidies. We will pursue strong, rules-based trade liberalization in conjunction with all other countries that are members of the World Trade Organization;

    · Implement a Green Cover Crop Program to protect prairie farmers. Severe flooding in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba has adversely affected the opportunity for farmers to harvest their normal crop. A Green Crop Cover Program will create a compensation fund for farmers facing crop damage caused by severe flooding; and

    · Require 5 per cent average renewable content in Canadian gasoline and diesel fuel, such as ethanol and biodiesel, by 2010.

    “Canadians will choose between a Conservative plan with committed support for farming and farm families, and Liberal indifference to rural Canada,” said Harper.




    Backgrounder
    December 21, 2005



    Harper to replace CAIS and boost ethanol and biodiesel

    Conservatives will invest an additional $500 million in farm support programs



    THE CHALLENGE:



    The family farm has long been a backbone of our country. For generations, our farmers have fed Canadians and become a breadbasket to the world. But farmers need our support.



    Farm incomes are down. The Liberals have admitted that the value of grain and oilseed production is down approximately $2 billion this year compared with the average over the past ten years. Our beef and cattle producers have also struggled – suffering under a two-year American ban on live Canadian cattle that cost Canadian producers more than $7 billion. During the fight to re-open the border, the Liberals sat on the sidelines, voting against a motion to send an all-party delegation to Washington in 2003, and leaving it to the Conservative Party to defend the political and legal interests of Canadian producers in 2005.



    Results of the WTO talks in Hong Kong were disappointing for the 90 per cent of Canadian producers who are export-oriented. The Liberal ministers who attended the WTO meetings in Hong Kong failed to work successfully on behalf of pork, beef, grain, and oilseed producers, among others, who need greater access to international markets in order to get a fair return on their product.



    And finally, the Canadian Agricultural Income Stabilization (CAIS) program has proven to be completely inadequate to address problems due to unfair trade as well as disasters such as drought and flooding in 2005. However, the Liberal government refused to significantly reform CAIS for the better, and farmers are still suffering from an inadequate income stabilization program that is also ineffective in addressing disaster situations.



    Canadian producers deserve better. A Conservative government will stand up for Canadian agriculture in world trade negotiations, provide more responsive farm income support and disaster relief, and move towards a Canadian ethanol strategy.



    THE PLAN:



    Today Stephen Harper unveiled the Conservative plan to stand up for Canadian agriculture. A Conservative government will:



    · Work with the provinces to replace the CAIS program in order to make income stabilization more responsive for average producers;

    · Introduce a separate disaster relief program above and beyond CAIS; and

    · Require an average of 5 per cent renewable fuel content in Canadian fuel by 2010.





    A Conservative Government will also:



    · Ensure that the $755 million in emergency federal assistance to grain and oilseed producers announced by the government on November 23, 2005, is delivered as quickly as possible.



    · Ensure that agricultural industries that choose to operate under domestic supply management remain viable. Canada needs efficient production planning, market-based returns to producers, and predictable imports to operate domestic supply management systems.



    · Give western grain farmers the freedom to make their own marketing and transportation decisions and allow them to participate voluntarily in producer organizations.



    · Defend Canada’s agricultural sectors, including the supply managed sectors, when negotiating international trade agreements. A Conservative government will seek better market access for Canadian agricultural and agri-food products in new and emerging markets. We will pursue strong, rules-based trade liberalization at the World Trade Organization.



    · Work toward a comprehensive program of research and development targeting new and emerging markets and technologies throughout the world.

    · Continue farm improvement loan guarantees and implement any necessary changes, such as an extension of the program to new farmers.



    Income stabilization and disaster relief:



    Cattle, grain, and other produces have been extremely unsatisfied with existing Liberal income stabilization programs. In short, the CAIS program has proven neither flexible enough nor funded sufficiently to deal with the consequences when a farm sector faces natural disaster or the collapse of its traditional markets. Recent examples include the cattle trade ban, the avian flu scare, and ongoing difficulties with trade-distorting agricultural subsidies.



    A Conservative government will replace CAIS with a new income stabilization program that is simpler and more responsive. We will ensure that it properly addresses the cost of production, market revenue, and inventory evaluation.



    Secondly, a Conservative government will be ready to take a leadership role when disaster strikes, and fund disaster relief separately from income stabilization.



    A Conservative government will also implement a Green Cover Crop Program to protect prairie farms. Severe flooding in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba has adversely affected the opportunity for farmers to harvest their normal crop. A Green Crop Cover Program will create a compensation fund for farmers facing crop damage caused by severe flooding.



    In order to properly fund a new income stabilization program and introduce a separate disaster relief program, a Conservative government will commit an extra $500 million per year to agriculture support programs over and above existing federal agriculture spending.



    RENEWABLE FUEL STANDARD:



    A Conservative government will require an average of 5 per cent renewable fuel content, such as ethanol and biodiesel, in our fuel by 2010.



    Currently less than one per cent of gasoline and diesel fuel content is renewable. We want to increase that renewable fuel content to five per cent overall.



    Ethanol is an alcohol made from wheat, barley, canola, straw, corn, and soybeans and can be mixed with traditional non-renewable petroleum. Biodiesel is another clean burning alternative fuel, produced from domestic, renewable resources. It is estimated that Canada has the potential to produce over 15 billion litres of renewable fuel per year.



    Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario are all on the road towards requiring higher ethanol blends in fuel, and many countries, including the United States and Brazil, have enacted alternative fuel standards as well.



    The benefits of using ethanol and biodiesel as a transportation fuel include lowering engine emissions (particularly sulfur), preserving non-renewable petroleum resources, and increasing demand for domestic agricultural products.



    A five per cent renewable fuel content standard will result in greenhouse gas emissions being reduced by about four megatonnes per year by 2010.



    By encouraging these fuels we will also create new incentives for investment in rural Canada.



    This measure alone could create a new demand for approximately 200 million bushels of agricultural commodities such as wheat, corn, and canola.



    A Conservative government will work with the fuel production, automotive, and agricultural industries to ensure that Canada benefits from these new energy technologies.



    SUPPLY MANAGEMENT:



    We also believe it is in the best interest of Canada and Canadian agriculture that the industries under the protection of supply management remain viable. We will support supply management and its goal to deliver a high quality product to consumers for a fair price with a reasonable return to the producer. A Conservative government recognizes the need for efficient production planning, market-based returns to producers, and predictable imports necessary to operate domestic supply management systems.



    GRAIN MARKETING:



    A Conservative government will give western grain farmers the freedom to make their own marketing and transportation decisions. Western grain farmers should be able to participate voluntarily in the Canadian Wheat Board.



    CANADA AT THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION:



    A Conservative government will support the development of strong international rules governing free and fair trade. It is only under such a system of rules that Canada's agricultural producers will be able to get a fair price and fair access to markets around the world. To that end, we are pleased that the latest round of WTO negotiations included the elimination of agricultural export subsidies by 2013.



    As well, in future negotiations, a Conservative government will vigorously pursue reduction of international trade barriers and tariffs, and we will seek to enhance export opportunities for all agricultural products with special emphasis on markets for processed and finished commodities.



    Unlike the Liberals, a Conservative government would see no value in pitting producer against producer, or region against region. Our party, with its rich history and strength all across this country, has designed a multi-faceted agricultural policy to ensure that all Canadian farmers would be better off under a Conservative government.



    THE CHOICE:



    For 12 years, Canadian farm families have put up with Liberal indifference.



    In this election, Canadians can choose a Conservative government that stands up for agriculture, rural Canada, and a safe food supply for all Canadians."





    IMHO: the Conservatives put some real innovative thought into this policy... for the BETTERMENT of all Canadians!

    #2
    The only thing I find new and likely to actually happen in this is the fact that all parties are talking about a minimum amount of bio blends in fuels this out of all the "promises" might actually occur no matter what party gets elected.
    Hopefully the capacity will be canadian built and western, however anything that using ag products for a non food use is a positive for the industry.

    Comment


      #3
      A little sceptical about replacing CAISP. Sure, the program is not perfect, but what farm program is. I think CAISP is a good program that could be improved upon, especially for cattle producers and young farmers. It is an easy election promise to come out with a better program.

      Comment


        #4
        JD4ME;

        I did not know the Liberals went to 5% Biofuel blend on diesel, where did you see this?

        Comment


          #5
          Tom

          Martin announced it in Ontario earlier in the weeks, it's on the Liberal party of canada website along with their response to the conservative ag. platform.

          Comment


            #6
            Results of the WTO talks in Hong Kong were disappointing for the 90 per cent of Canadian producers who are export-oriented. The Liberal ministers who attended the WTO meetings in Hong Kong failed to work successfully on behalf of pork, beef, grain, and oilseed producers, among others, who need greater access to international markets in order to get a fair return on their product.

            Sorry for all you supply management types, but unless we do something about this in Canada, us grain/cattle farmers are screwed. They let go of the crow in the 90's to lead by example, guess who was affected the most? the WEST!!! And you know what, it definitely did not help us. It did nothing to level the playing field. I do not care who is in power, we will not be able to gain new markets with the supply management albatros hanging around our neck!! What double speak!! The world is aware of this!! Just bitter cause the western grain farmer is apparently expendable. THe only bright spot is the potential cost benefit of Bio diesel and ethanol at these oil prices, unfortunatley I may not be able to afford to grow a crop up to 2010 to realize this benifit.

            Comment

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