Farms.com Home   News

Climate Change Identified as Key Market Influencer

The Chief Agricultural Economist with Farm Credit Canada encourages agriculture sector stakeholders to consider climate change as they formulate risk management strategies for 2020. Farm Credit Canada has identified climate change as one of the three key forces that have the potential to disrupt the global economy and shape Canada’s agriculture and food industry outlook in 2020.
 
J.P. Gervais, FCC’s Chief Agricultural Economist, says considering the impact of weather on agriculture world wide it should come as no surprise that climate would be identified as a major disruptor.
 
Clip-J.P. Gervais-Farm Credit Canada:
 
Climate has a number of different implications for our Canadian farms. In a way you can have a longer growing season so that can lead producers to consider different crops. You've seen some crops in the prairies gaining some acreage where as we've seen other crops, their acres go down. I do think that producers are making the adjustments in terms of what they can grow based on weather.
 
That's more long term, where you can incrementally consider new crops where as in the short term I really do think that this is all about risk management and making sure that you have the right protection in place. There's no doubt that there will be opportunities and risk, depending on crops vursus livestock and so forth. 2019 was a, quote unquote, special year in that sense when it comes to agriculture. Coast to coast we've had issues in Canada when it comes to climate.
 
We had flooding in central Canada, we had dry conditions in the prairies and a delayed harvest and challenging harvesting conditions as well on the prairies, hurricanes in the Atlantic and so forth. Weather can change a little bit of the outlook for the different production sectors that we have in Canadian ag and I do expect producers to react and mitigate some of the impacts that climate can bring.
Source : Farmscape

Trending Video

USDA Feb Crop Report a WIN for Soybeans + 1 Year Trade Truce Extension

Video: USDA Feb Crop Report a WIN for Soybeans + 1 Year Trade Truce Extension


USDA took Trumps comments that China would buy more U.S. soybeans seriously and headline news that the U.S./China trade truce would be extended when Trump/Xi meet in the first week of April was a BIG WIN for soybeans this week! 2026 “Mini” U.S. ethanol boom thanks to 45Z + China’s ban of phosphates from Feb. – August of 2026 will not help lower fertilizer prices anytime soon! 30 mmt of Chinese corn harvest is of poor quality and maybe a technical breakout in wheat futures.

*Apologies! Where we talk about the latest CFTC update as of 10th Feb 2026, managed money funds covered their net short position in canola to the tune of +42,746 week-on-week to flip to net long 145 contracts and not (as we mistakenly said) +90,009 wk/wk to 47,408.