The Nova Scotia Federation of Agriculture will use over half a million dollars in new federal funding to put dollar values on farmers’ environmental management activities in an Ecological Goods and Services (EG&S) pilot project.
Guy Lauzon, the federal parliamentary secretary for agriculture, announced the funding at the federation’s annual meeting Friday in Truro.
The pilot project will get $511,000 in funding plus in-kind support from the province, the Nova Scotia Agricultural College and other commodity and community groups. It will include a survey of the province’s farming community to assess costs and benefits and determine the possible impacts on farmers.
Read Also

Alberta Crop Report: Rains in the south, dryness in the north
Rain fell onto the southern half of Alberta last week, while hot and dry conditions persisted in the northern half, according to the province’s crop report released on July 18.
The project will determine the potential payments to farmers who take on environmental projects — such as the development of wetlands — to help offset their costs and encourage more environmental action, the federal government said in a release. The funding will also support EG&S projects on the St. Andrews River watershed and go toward an assessment of the benefits of liming farmland next to watershed waterways.
BOPI funding
Ottawa also pledged another $228,093 in funding for five other projects through the Biofuels Opportunities for Producers Initiative (BOPI), administered in Nova Scotia by Agri-Futures Nova Scotia. The projects include:
- $78,000 to ACA Co-operative, for a project to produce biodiesel from poultry litter and poultry processing waste;
- $56,000 for an ethanol marketing study by Fundy Biofuels;
- $45,000 to West Nova Agro-Commodities, for an assessment and business plan on revenue streams for waste generated by biofuel production;
- $43,750 to L and M Farm Holdings, for a feasibility study of a plant that would produce 200,000 litres of ethanol per year from grains as well as carrot and potato waste; and
- $5,343 to SF Rendering, to work out the capital costs to process canola produced in Atlantic Canada into biodiesel.