[url]https://www.producer.com/news/ag-sector-fears-senate-bills-effect-on-lending/[/url]
Farm lending tied to climate, we already are the most environmental farmers in the world. Who did not tell the Gov of Canada and the Senate?
In addition, the WHO Pandemic treaty will take effect this month. It will tie climate policy to health.
Do you even know what the WHO treaty is? Do you know who funds the WHO?
[url]https://www.realagriculture.com/2024/04/auditor-general-gives-agriculture-and-agri-food-canadas-climate-track-record-a-failing-grade/[/url]
The Auditor General's confirmation that the department did not consult with farmers or other stakeholders prior to establishing its fertilizer emissions reduction target in 2020 raises questions about the inclusivity of such decisions.
Did farmers even notice they were omitted until the Auditor General observed on our behalf?
And finally, this is the agenda:
[url]https://news.berkeley.edu/2022/02/01/global-elimination-of-meat-production-could-save-the-planet/[/url]
This is not new; Canada and much of the World are focused on climate policy. We have solid evidence that much of the language used on beef and methane is not credible. Grain farmers know that feed grains help create demand that makes viable rotational choice, But, how do farmers become included? Or are we the low-hanging fruit of climate policy,
We also know that Elites prefer the world to eat bugs, as they can own bug factories.
This is a question of voice.
What voice does global agriculture have, and do we care that we have become the low-hanging fruit of elites wanting to control the food industry and use climate policy as the tool to get there?
In Canada do we even have a climate policy voice despite millions in check-off dollars, or have we focused most on production solutions?
As the world turns, what does the future look like?
What does lower feed demand do to cereal production and profitable rotations?
Just a few questions from the headlines.
Farm lending tied to climate, we already are the most environmental farmers in the world. Who did not tell the Gov of Canada and the Senate?
In addition, the WHO Pandemic treaty will take effect this month. It will tie climate policy to health.
Do you even know what the WHO treaty is? Do you know who funds the WHO?
[url]https://www.realagriculture.com/2024/04/auditor-general-gives-agriculture-and-agri-food-canadas-climate-track-record-a-failing-grade/[/url]
The Auditor General's confirmation that the department did not consult with farmers or other stakeholders prior to establishing its fertilizer emissions reduction target in 2020 raises questions about the inclusivity of such decisions.
Did farmers even notice they were omitted until the Auditor General observed on our behalf?
And finally, this is the agenda:
[url]https://news.berkeley.edu/2022/02/01/global-elimination-of-meat-production-could-save-the-planet/[/url]
This is not new; Canada and much of the World are focused on climate policy. We have solid evidence that much of the language used on beef and methane is not credible. Grain farmers know that feed grains help create demand that makes viable rotational choice, But, how do farmers become included? Or are we the low-hanging fruit of climate policy,
We also know that Elites prefer the world to eat bugs, as they can own bug factories.
This is a question of voice.
What voice does global agriculture have, and do we care that we have become the low-hanging fruit of elites wanting to control the food industry and use climate policy as the tool to get there?
In Canada do we even have a climate policy voice despite millions in check-off dollars, or have we focused most on production solutions?
As the world turns, what does the future look like?
What does lower feed demand do to cereal production and profitable rotations?
Just a few questions from the headlines.
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