I don’t know jensend, most of what I’ve read from the NFU is adversarial to our industry partners, ignores economic reality, and belittles anyone who disagrees with them. A majority of Alberta farmers would like an open market, but their wishes are ignored by the NFU who would rather ridicule the Alberta gov’t for trying to accommodate that majority.
In contrast, in the Canadian canola industry, there is more of an atmosphere of trying to make the pie bigger for everyone, instead of worrying about extracting a larger share of what they are helping become a shrinking pie. We had a record canola crop last year in a world market that we are a large player, and yet because of the work farmer and industry partners have done to grow the market, we continue to enjoy relatively good prices. It’s no coincidence that there is a trend toward farmer income increasingly coming from canola versus single desk crops.
It’s a shame that all the CWB rhetoric (on both sides actually) and adversarial rhetoric on behalf of the NFU keeps any kind of cooperation between farmers and wheat industry partners from enlarging the wheat “pie” in Canada to the betterment of everyone.
In contrast, in the Canadian canola industry, there is more of an atmosphere of trying to make the pie bigger for everyone, instead of worrying about extracting a larger share of what they are helping become a shrinking pie. We had a record canola crop last year in a world market that we are a large player, and yet because of the work farmer and industry partners have done to grow the market, we continue to enjoy relatively good prices. It’s no coincidence that there is a trend toward farmer income increasingly coming from canola versus single desk crops.
It’s a shame that all the CWB rhetoric (on both sides actually) and adversarial rhetoric on behalf of the NFU keeps any kind of cooperation between farmers and wheat industry partners from enlarging the wheat “pie” in Canada to the betterment of everyone.
Comment