Forage insurance based on rainfall

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: February 21, 2002

Alberta forage crop insurance will be based on rainfall, not grass

growth, announced the Agriculture Financial Services Corp.

“We want to get away from the traditional problems of how much grass

grew or didn’t grow,” said Merle Jacobson of Lacombe.

Forage insurance used to be based on how much grass grew under cages

across the province, but farmers were not satisfied that the amount

clipped in the cages represented growth in their pasture.

Under the new Lack of Moisture Insurance Pilot Program, farmers can buy

Read Also

University of Manitoba research agronomist Kristen MacMillan discusses nodulation and nitrogen fixation in dry beans in front of her research plots in Carman, Man., in late July 2025.

Lower nitrogen rates in dry beans could pay off for farmers

Manitoba research is testing whether reduced nitrogen fertilizer in dry beans can maintain yields while cutting costs and lowering greenhouse gas emissions.

insurance against a lack of rain based on nearby Environment Canada

weather sites. An insurance payment is triggered if rain during the

growing season is less than 80 percent of normal for the area.

“Rain has a big impact on whether grass grows,” said Jacobson.

In Saskatchewan, a similar precipitation-based pilot program last year

was popular with farmers, said Doug Matthies, general manager of

Saskatchewan Crop Insurance in Melville.

“It was very popular, straightforward and simple,” said Matthies. By

mid-August, cheques were written to 174 of the 336 farmers on the

program who made claims.

Farmers liked the program because it was tied to Environment Canada

weather stations, an objective, independent source, he said.

The Saskatchewan government’s budget will determine if the program

continues, is dropped or expanded this year, said Matthies.

The farmers’ share of the $826,500 premiums was $230,000. The program

paid out $623,000 in claims. Saskatchewan has no permanent insurance

program for grazing acres.

Alberta has also expanded its Satellite Imagery Insurance Pilot

Program. Satellite imagery is used to calculate the pasture condition

for a particular township. The program has been expanded to include

most of southeastern Alberta from Hanna to Foremost.

Changes have also been made to the Forage (Hay) Insurance program to

compensate farmers for production losses from natural perils.

The deadline for all three programs is Feb. 28.

The Alberta government will also announce changes to its crop insurance

program by the end of the month.

explore

Stories from our other publications