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Alberta’s 2024 harvest season is underway

Harvest 2024 has officially begun across the province and Alberta’s government wishes farmers a safe, successful and productive season.

As combines start rolling across Alberta, farmers are working diligently to maximize yields and safely take off their crops, making this a busy and important time for the province’s agricultural sector. Farmers faced many challenges this year due to drought concerns, late spring rains and hot sunny days. Fortunately, Alberta farmers are resilient and early reports show that yields are in line with historical averages.

Alberta producers continue to prioritize safety throughout the busy harvest season, including maintaining vigilance when operating machinery. It is also crucial for Albertans to be cautious and patient on roads and highways. Albertans will see more combines and grain trucks on the move this time of year and should give farmers extra space as they transport equipment from field to field.

“Fall is one of the busiest times of year for farmers and harvest means long days in the fields. Thank you to our province’s dedicated farmers and ranchers who work tirelessly to put food on tables here at home and around the globe.”

RJ Sigurdson, Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation
While it is very early in the 2024 harvest season, Alberta’s crop reports indicate that the Peace and South Regions are currently expecting above-average yields while the Northwest is on par with the five-year averages. Current data indicates the Central and Northeast Regions are expecting yields to be slightly below their five-year average. First cut dryland hay is complete and averaged 1.5 tons per acre, above the historical averages, with the highest yields in the Northwest and Northeast Regions. About half of Alberta producers expect a second cut of hay, with 16 per cent already cut. Irrigated first cut hay in the South averaged 2.6 tons per acre and the second cut is half done.

Quick facts:

  • The Alberta Crop Report is developed through a partnership between Agriculture and Irrigation, Agriculture Financial Services Corporation and the Association of Alberta Agricultural Fieldmen.
  • Agriculture Financial Services Corporation, on behalf of the federal and provincial governments, offers a suite of business risk management programs that help protect Alberta’s producers.
  • The suite, which includes AgriInsurance, AgriStability, AgriInvest and the AgriRecovery framework, is designed to respond to each producer’s unique situation and assist with severe market and production losses and disaster events.
  • Agriculture and Irrigation provides online information and tools to help with on-farm business management and production issues during dry conditions and periods of business stress.
  • Since 1940, the Alberta Crop Report has provided timely production information during the growing season.
  • Data for the report is collected through regular surveys on moisture and crop conditions, progress of seeding and harvesting, insect and disease situation and yield potential and crop quality.

Trending Video

Seeing the Whole Season: How Continuous Crop Modeling Is Changing Breeding

Video: Seeing the Whole Season: How Continuous Crop Modeling Is Changing Breeding

Plant breeding has long been shaped by snapshots. A walk through a plot. A single set of notes. A yield check at the end of the season. But crops do not grow in moments. They change every day.

In this conversation, Gary Nijak of AerialPLOT explains how continuous crop modeling is changing the way breeders see, measure, and select plants by capturing growth, stress, and recovery across the entire season, not just at isolated points in time.

Nijak breaks down why point-in-time observations can miss critical performance signals, how repeated, season-long data collection removes the human bottleneck in breeding, and what becomes possible when every plot is treated as a living data set. He also explores how continuous modeling allows breeding programs to move beyond vague descriptors and toward measurable, repeatable insights that connect directly to on-farm outcomes.

This conversation explores:

• What continuous crop modeling is and how it works

• Why traditional field observations fall short over a full growing season

• How scale and repeated measurement change breeding decisions

• What “digital twins” of plots mean for selection and performance

• Why data, not hardware, is driving the next shift in breeding innovation As data-driven breeding moves from research into real-world programs, this discussion offers a clear look at how seeing the whole season is reshaping value for breeders, seed companies, and farmers, and why this may be only the beginning.