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Alberta drought conditions expected to improve heading into 2025

A little more than a year ago, Alberta's environment minister wrote to municipalities, asking them to find ways to use less water in light of a looming drought. 

The year that followed brought extremely low reservoir levels, what the province called the largest water-sharing agreements in its history, and a renewed conversation around the province's water supply.

It was a roller-coaster of a season for farmers like Alison Davie of North Paddock Farms, one that started with dryness and anxiety and closed with the relief of ample rain.

"We really weren't sure what we were going to be facing," Davie said. "In the end, it turned out a lot better than we expected it to be in March."

Now, heading into 2025, the biggest wild card is — as it always is — Mother Nature.

"Next year again, we're hoping that we get ample snow in the mountains, and it continues to fill the reservoirs, and then we're hoping for a full water allocation come next spring," Davie said.

"Then, continue to grow the best quality crops that we can."

Davie and other farmers are still watching and waiting to see what 2025 will bring.

But the early signals are more positive compared to where the province was at this time last year, when the environment minister was reaching out to municipalities with her warning, said Trevor Hadwen, an agroclimate specialist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada.

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Democratizing Gene Editing - Pairwise’s Vision for the Future of Agriculture

Video: Democratizing Gene Editing - Pairwise’s Vision for the Future of Agriculture

Pairwise has built its business around an idea that runs counter to how many companies approach innovation: make transformative technology easier to access.

In this Seed World interview, CEO Tom Adams discusses why broader access to gene editing could speed crop improvement, expand innovation opportunities and help agriculture address emerging challenges. He explains why Pairwise believes no single company can solve all of agriculture's problems alone—and why making advanced breeding technologies available to more organizations could accelerate progress across the industry.

The conversation explores how consumer trust influences technology adoption, why innovations like pitless cherries and seedless blackberries matter beyond convenience, and how future crop improvements could help address labor shortages, automation, harvest efficiency and other production challenges. Adams also shares his perspective on what the industry may be underestimating about the next wave of gene editing innovation.

Watch the full interview to hear why Pairwise believes agriculture is approaching an important inflection point for gene editing, and why the pace of innovation over the next decade could surprise the industry.

Topics Covered:

o Democratizing agricultural innovation

o Consumer trust and technology adoption

o The business case for sharing innovation

o Expanding innovation beyond major crops

o Next-generation breeding technologies