Farms.com Home   News

The Economic Impact Of Fusarium In Alberta

To illustrate the cost of fusarium head blight to Alberta’s producers, Alberta Agriculture and Forestry recently published a report on its research into the economic impact. The report outlined the potential costs at both a farm level and for the province as a whole.
 
“The report suggests that, while some economic losses occur due to yield reduction, grade loss is responsible for the greatest cost,” says Ted Nibourg, farm business management specialist, Ag-Info Centre, Stettler. 
 
“At the farm level, three degrees of severity were used to show the costs of fusarium head blight. A low incidence was considered to be 0.4% wheat kernels affected by fusarium, a medium incidence was considered to be 1.0% and a high outbreak was 2.0%. A low outbreak reduces #1 hard red wheat to a 2, a medium level drops the grade to a 3 and the high incidence will reduce #1 wheat to feed. The report used a six year average price differential between grades to calculate farm loss levels.”
 
The spread between #1 and #2 was $35 per tonne ranging up to $63 per tonne for the #1 – feed wheat spread. “Assuming a 50 bushel per acre crop meant that grade losses for a low outbreak amounted to $48/acre, $65/acre for a medium outbreak and $87/acre for wheat downgraded to feed. Those costs can almost eliminate the contribution margin for hard red wheat in the brown and dark brown soil zones.”
 
Fusarium first reared its ugly head in Alberta during the 90s, says Nibourg. 
 
“It’s now common in southern Alberta and there is evidence it’s showing up in new areas of central and northern Alberta as well. On a provincial level the economic loss due to fusarium can be substantial. Data on fusarium incidence and severity collected by the Canadian Grain Commission’s Harvest Sample Program for the years 2003 to 2012 in the province was used in the report. Weather related factors were assumed to be constant for the purpose of the report. A generalized grade distribution for Canadian Western Red Spring Wheat was applied for all years of the assessment.”
 
For the first few years of the sample program, relatively little fusarium was reported. “However, in 2009 it’s estimated that about 150,000 tonnes of wheat in Alberta were downgraded from #1 and #2 down to #3 and feed, resulting in economic losses of about $3.6 million.”
 
Source : Agriculture and Forestry

Trending Video

Luke Harvey & EASYFIX Equine

Video: Luke Harvey & EASYFIX Equine

We recently caught up with one of our wonderful EASYFIX Equine customers Luke Harvey, to see his superb new pre-training facility. Luke installed our Diamond DeluexGlue & Sealed Stable Matting System & Softwall Wall Matting.