Your Reading List

Eight N.S. food firms to get infrastructure funding

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: December 30, 2009

Eight Nova Scotia agri-food companies are to share in the latest round of support from the province’s Strategic Infrastructure Investment Fund.

So far, $4.25 million has been committed from the $6 million, four-year fund. The eight businesses receiving support in the program’s third year include:

  • Foxhill Cheese House at Port Williams, to expand its processing capacity to “respond to opportunities” to make new specialty dairy products;
  • 2M Farms Ltd., of Berwick, to expand its seed potato operation to allow potato growers in the province to enter new specialty export markets’
  • Read Also

    Jocelyn Smith, an assistant professor of field crop entomology at the University of Guelph, shared ongoing challenges facing farmers as pest-resistant crops continue to emerge in Ontario at Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show. Photo: Sarah McGoldrick

    Improving calf health, fighting pesticide resistance highlighted at Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show

    New strides in agricultural innovation including improving calf health, fighting pesticide resistance were the featured topic at the University of Guelph Feeding The Future discussion at Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show 2025.

  • Nova Agri. Inc. at Centreville, to support the commercialization of greenhouse technology that may allow Nova Scotia producers to better meet consumer demand for fresh horticulture products;
  • Holmestead Cheese Sales Inc. of Aylesford, to expand to meet demand for existing cheese products and to develop new product lines;
  • MacMaster Choice Meats at Antigonish, to develop production and processing systems;
  • Eyking Brothers of Millville, to develop a facility that will “position them to respond to new opportunities in the growing market for value-added vegetable products;”
  • Cogmagun Poultry Processing Co. Ltd. at Centre Burlington, to provide “enhanced” value-added processing opportunities for Nova Scotia’s specialty poultry industry; and
  • Northumberlamb Co-operative Ltd./Brookside Abattoir of Truro, to build Nova Scotia producers’ ability to supply high-quality, provincially-inspected lamb and other meat products to existing and new markets.

“We are working with producers and processors to assist them as they develop their economic potential and improve competitiveness,” Agriculture Minister John MacDonell said in a release last week.

“These businesses were chosen for their strong business plans and benefits for the agri-food industry as a whole.”

explore

Stories from our other publications