New anthrax cases confirmed in Sask.

New anthrax cases are fewer this week, but authorities warn that producers still need to be vigilant in their approach to the disease. In Saskatchewan 30 new cases were found in the week ending Aug. 27, with four new premises having deaths. In Alberta’s first instance of the disease this year, eight dead bison tested […] Read more

Food industry comes calling

There’s light at the end of the long tunnel that Burcon NutraScience has been crawling through in the hope of getting canola and other oilseed protein products into the commercial marketplace. The Winnipeg company’s products are being tested by “some very major food companies,” says its president. “It’s 16 years now, and it’ll be 18ish […] Read more

Demand for truckers unmet

Farmers don’t have to struggle too much these days to sort out all the competing bids from truckers desperate to haul their grain. They’ll be lucky to find anyone willing to haul grain on short notice in Alberta, and the shortage of grain truckers is extending across the Prairies. It’s all part of the collateral […] Read more


Inoculant company earnings down

Predicting what’s going to happen in the grain industry months in advance is a risky proposition. But that’s exactly what farm input suppliers like Philom Bios Inc., a Saskatoon-based inoculant company, have to do every year. Some years it all works out, some years it doesn’t. For Philom Bios, which manufactures and distributes products like […] Read more

Groups stop fighting over ethanol plans

Federal and provincial ethanol groups are finally on the same policy page, but they disagree on how they got there. As recently as June, the Saskatchewan Ethanol Development Council and the Canadian Renewable Fuels Association were at odds with one another. A panel of MPs gathered on Parliament Hill was given conflicting messages by the […] Read more


Green party revises agriculture policy

As the official agent for the Green party in the rural Alberta riding of Macleod during the last election, Mark Taylor saw how farmers received the party’s agricultural policy. “They just hammered us on it,” the petroleum engineer and Green party activist told delegates at the national Green party leadership and policy convention in Ottawa […] Read more

Model program examines feasibility of ethanol plants

Rural community groups interested in building integrated ethanol-feedlot operations now have access to a template that will help them decide if it is a feasible project for their area. The template, which is applicable for small facilities ranging from 15-25 million litres of annual output, outlines the steps for building a plant and helps determine […] Read more

Party targets western support

Canada’s Green Party has the potential to become a significant Canadian political force and Western Canada could be the region where it first breaks through, says a national public opinion pollster. “The West is target No. 1,” Nik Nanos of SES Research told a news conference Aug. 25 after speaking to a Green party national […] Read more


Wheat board defends record on winter wheat

Winter wheat generally accounts for well under five percent of Western Canada’s wheat production and attracts a modest amount of attention. But that’s changed recently, as the Canadian Wheat Board has come under criticism for its marketing and pricing of winter wheat. First the Western Canadian Wheat Growers Association issued a July 14 press release […] Read more

Good season helps prairie fruit growers

The season was short and sweet for prairie fruit crops this summer. Average to above average yields are reported across the three prairie provinces where hot muggy July days shortened the picking season of some varieties. Grower Arne Strom called it the best year ever for his Sherwood Forest Orchards near Regina, which houses about […] Read more