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More recognition for farmer efforts

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Published: November 18, 2010

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The Canadian Federation of Agriculture expounds on efforts to preserve biodiversity.

World leaders meeting in Nagoya, Japan, discussed plans to reduce the rate of global biodiversity loss.

Biodiversity is integral to protecting habitat and species at risk, as farmers well know. Perception in the media usually focuses on the habitat-conservation side of this multi-faceted issue. But farmers recognize that crop variety is also a major factor in how the world deals with environmental preservation.

As the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization emphasized recently, crop biodiversity is a strategic resource for sustainable development and eradicating hunger, and it provides resilience against environmental disasters.

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The FAO went so far as to say that future food security may be at risk unless agricultural biodiversity is made more of a priority.

While our leaders discuss biodiversity at high level international conferences, farmers continue their ongoing environmental efforts here at home.

They keep a cautious eye toward maintaining productive land for years to come. They use environmentally conscious practices, such as no-till farming, crop rotation, water quality control, riparian-area buffer zones, grazing/forage management and other habitat protection. This first-hand appreciation of nature’s riches, and the need to cultivate with care, gives farmers a unique perspective in developing effective land-use practices.

Together, farm organizations are a valuable source of knowledge for government and other land-use decisions makers. The Canadian Federation of Agriculture prides itself in partnering with various advisory groups, such as the federal Species-at-Risk Advisory Committee, to ensure that policies are created with clear objectives and practical implementation measures. for these services.

Many CFA members are actively involved with conservation activities. Examples include: the Environmental Farm Plans co-ordinated by our provincial members with federal and provincial partners; the

Union des producteurs agricoles Watershed-based Water Management program, for which it won CFA’s Environmental Stewardship award; and the Riparian Health Assessment Project co-ordinated through the Nova Scotia Federation of Agriculture. There are many other successful projects carried out at local and regional levels.

Efforts toward agricultural biodiversity protection are also increasing among leading agri-business groups.

The Canadian Business and Biodiversity Council, formed in 2008, counts Syngenta Canada and the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association among its members. The CBBC published a series of case studies earlier this year to showcase its members’ biodiversity programs.

Syngenta, a CFA corporate leader, received an award for its small marsh restoration program, which helps farmers in the Maritime provinces restore on-farm wetlands. Ducks Unlimited is a partner in this program.

Agriculture is an active participant in biodiversity protection through various private initiatives, innovative partnerships and organizational activities.

This leadership needs to be recognized and valued in any discussions about biodiversity.

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