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KVD and winter wheat

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    KVD and winter wheat

    3. Winter wheat development limited by KVD
    by Rae Groeneveld




    A winter wheat research scientist is frustrated over Canada’s grain grading
    and classification system, saying it’s an impediment to the introduction of
    new winter wheat varieties.

    Dr. Brian Fowler from the Crop Development Centre at the University of
    Saskatchewan says the continuing struggle to conform winter wheat varieties
    to the Kernel Visual Distinguishability requirements is stifling innovation.
    KVD ensures that winter wheat does not look like Canada western red spring
    wheat. CWRS is the main class of wheat grown in Western Canada.

    “The estimates are that we are spending $2.2 million a year on winter wheat
    breeding in Western Canada, and in five years we haven’t be able to get any
    new varieties through, which is $11 million wasted,” Fowler says. He spoke
    to the recent Winter Cereal Canada annual meeting in Yorkton, Sask.

    Fowler has been trying to bring new winter wheat varieties to the prairie
    production system, but can’t get them to the point where the varieties are
    visually distinguishable from CWRS.

    The Canadian Grain Commission’s development of a new general class of wheat
    and the removal of KVD for non-milling classes of wheat were supposed to
    help with the introduction of new varieties. However, winter wheat still
    must be visually distinguishable from the main class of spring wheat.

    Fowler’s answer to the limitations of KVD is the introduction of a
    declaration system where farmers would document the grain and variety they
    are delivering.

    “There is no other country in the world that uses KVD to segregate their
    grain quality classes,” Fowlers says.

    The Canada Wheat Board has supported KVD and its continuation in the grain
    classification system. Vice-president of product development and marketing
    support Earl Geddes says 90 per cent of the wheat produced in Western Canada
    is protected by KVD.

    “If we are going to remove the KVD requirements from those classes and allow
    red winter wheat and CPS red wheat or hard white spring wheat to look like
    these other classes, there is a price to pay,” Geddes says.

    That price, according to Geddes, is the increased costs of a declaration and
    monitoring system to ensure the different classes of wheat can remain
    segregated.

    Geddes believes winter wheat breeding would be best focused on developing
    varieties with low protein levels that are in demand by the ethanol sector.
    He says yield can be greatly increased by reducing the protein in winter
    wheat varieties.

    “I think there is lots of room for the development of general purpose wheat
    by simply lowering the protein and focusing on kernel shapes other than
    CWRS,” Geddes says.

    After reading this how can a winter wheat producer have any confidence in the CWB as there marketing representative. The comments made by Mr. Geddes make it obvious that he other doesn't understand the issue and it's impact on winter wheat or the more likely that the CWB really doesn't care about the minor classes of wheat.Declaration and monitoring are becoming standard in the industry regardless of KVD. Maybe they should take heed of their own comments. If you can't provide any value to the producers of minor classes of wheat then you should voluntarily remove yourself from the market.

    #2
    Maybe this needs to be the next move by the government?

    Remove all the minor classes of wheat from the exclusive jurisdiction of the cwb.

    The cwb only removes value from these grains.

    If we think the cwb offers little value to the marketing of barley, they offer much less to the minor classes of wheat.

    Come to think of it they offer little value to much of anything other than the Liberal Party and the employment levels of Winnipeg.

    Comment


      #3
      The CWB should be called the CDB, for Canadian Dichotomy Board - it seems they have two versions of just about everything:

      Version 1.0 <i>If the CWB was shut down, Wpg will lose all those jobs.</i>
      Version 2.0 <i>If the CWB loses the single desk, the grain companies and railroads will snap up all the good people working at the CWB.</i>

      Why wouldn't those people get jobs at the railroads and grain companies if the CWB was shut down? The CWB thinks they will if the CWB loses the single desk?

      Comment

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