Janet Krayden says that TFWs have been unfairly blamed for the housing crisis.

Agriculture industry wary of federal immigration plan

Feds vow to reduce 'temporary immigration,' but group says temporary workers are not the same as international students

Reading Time: 2 minutes The 2024 federal budget’s promise to reduce “temporary immigration” could reduce the number of temporary foreign workers available to Canadian agriculture and agricultural businesses. The document states the government “will reduce the share of temporary residents in Canada to five per cent of the total population over the next three years,” which it estimates will […] Read more

Photo: Thinkstock

Don’t fear FITFIR, says Alberta water expert

Rights holders likely to negotiate in times of water shortage

Reading Time: 5 minutes Alberta river and reservoir levels remain lower than normal and water availability continues to worry irrigators. Will there be enough water to go around? What happens if there isn’t? Answers can be found in the province’s current Water Act, passed in 1999, which contains the same “first in time, first in right” (FITFIR) system that […] Read more


A man is seen outside the house damaged by Russian shelling, Odesa Region, southern Ukraine. (Photo by Nina Liashonok/Ukrinform/Sipa USA)

Ukraine: Our common hive

The people of Ukraine continue to adapt, survive and even thrive

Reading Time: 5 minutes You wake up in the morning and drink coffee before starting the work day. You turn on the TV and listen to a long list of deaths and destruction that happened in your country overnight. The announcer speaks almost without emotion, as if he is talking about everyday, ordinary things. You hear that 10 missiles […] Read more

Phosphate rock mining in the island country of Nauru, 2007. Unlike nitrogen, which can be captured from the air through natural cycles, phosphate is a declining resource which must be mined or captured from waste. Credit: Lorrie Graham/AusAID/Wikimedia Commons

Martison Phosphate Project aims to make Canada self-sufficient in phosphorus

Reading Time: 3 minutes A lot of what determines what Canadian farmers pay for phosphate fertilizer and how readily they can get it happens outside of Canada’s borders. According to Stephen Case, chief executive officer and president of Fox River Resources, Canada has become completely reliant on phosphate sourced from other countries like the U.S., Russia and Morocco. He’s […] Read more


From left to right: Reese Bert, Noah Van Langen, Nate Ference and Drew Leeds hold up some of the material grown with Altario school's hydroponics system.

Student-led farm tests hydroponic cow chow

Altario school farm looks to student leadership, and the latest project is indoor-grown cattle fodder

Reading Time: 3 minutes Students at one small-town school near the Alberta-Saskatchewan border are testing how hydroponic vertical farming technology could be used to feed cattle.


Bean burgers made with canola protein powder at Burcon’s alternative meats protein lab in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada August 23, 2019. Picture taken August 23, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon VanRaes

We have a protein problem

OPINION | Sources should be evaluated head-to-head on a lifecycle basis and include contribution to human nutrition

Reading Time: 2 minutes Development of all protein options should be supported. Likewise, all protein sources should be evaluated head-to-head on a lifecycle basis.



Photo: Canada Beef Inc.

The feedlot solution to food waste

Cattle industry documentary pitches rumination as great food waste upcycler

Reading Time: 3 minutes Food waste takes up space in landfills and its breakdown adds methane to the atmosphere, so there’s value in feeding it to livestock instead.


Getting acceptance for gene editing

Getting acceptance for gene editing

The Council for Agricultural Science and Technology offers recommendations to ensure plant breeding tech continues to benefit agriculture

Reading Time: 2 minutes The rapid pace of change brought by genome editing tools has created many new opportunities for the agri-food industry, but they aren’t without challenges. Regulatory hurdles must be considered, and the tools must benefit society as well as the agriculture industry.

(Noel Hendrickson/DigitalVision/Getty Images)

Loblaw to back Canada grocery code 

The code has been the focus of considerable back and forth between food retailers and Ottawa

After months of negotiation, Loblaw Companies Limited (Loblaw) says it’s standing behind a proposed grocery code of conduct.