Report warns 40% of farm operators set to retire by 2033

 THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

A new report says more than 40 per cent of farm operators will retire over the next decade, leaving Canada with a shortage

    The Canadian Press

The report from the Royal Bank of Canada, Boston Consulting Group Centre for Canada’s Future and Arrell Food Institute at the University of Guelph says the country will be short 24,000 general farm, nursery and greenhouse operators.

It also estimates that 66 per cent of producers do not have a succession plan in place.

 “The shortage will come at critical moment because Canada’s agricultural sector will need to produce significantly more food”

To address the shortage and lack of succession plans, the report says Canada will need to accept 30,000 permanent immigrants by 2033 to take over existing farms and greenhouses or establish their own.

It also recommends the country build a new pipeline of domestic operators and workers by bolstering agriculture education and increasing spending on automation, which can make existing farms more efficient.

The report says the shortage will come at critical moment because Canada’s agricultural sector will need to produce significantly more food for a growing world population, but must also cut emissions to meet climate targets.

 
 
 
 
 

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In our December 2024 issue we look at the Indonesia Economic Partnership Agreement, Federal funding for the Cattle Industry’s Improvement initiatives, Ontario’s Agritourism Sector, Cargill cutting jobs, A&W tackling food waste, Consumer Trust over Climate Optics, the rising cost of doing business, and much more!

 

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