The Global Agriculture Technology Exchange (Gate) is a critical initiative to diversify Canada’s cereal markets and secure long-term stability for a sector that contributes over $68 billion to the economy and supports over 370,000 jobs.
Why Gate Matters
Gate represents a strategic investment in maintaining Canada’s grain advantage. As global competition intensifies and trade risks rise, Canada needs infrastructure that matches our global ambitions. Gate will be a state-of-the-art agriculture hub where Canadian grains are showcased, tested, improved, and trusted—bringing together global buyers, researchers, farmers, and the entire value chain.
What differentiates Canadian cereals globally are the technical and market support services delivered by Cereals Canada: market education, buyer training, trade issue resolution, and quality demonstrations. These services sustain demand for Canadian wheat, barley, and oats while building the trust that commands premium prices. Since opening in 1972, Cereals Canada has welcomed more than 150,000 international visitors to its Winnipeg headquarters. Gate will scale this impact significantly.
Economic Impact of Gate
Canadian cereals are exported to over 80 countries, generating $13.8 billion in export value annually. With 90% of our grain exported, Gate serves as essential trade infrastructure that will enable Canada to maintain influence at global tables, respond to trade barriers, and enhance Canada’s ability to address Maximum Residue Limit (MRL) challenges and food safety assurance. Gate will also strengthen the feedback loop between breeders, the value chain, and end users, and support Canada’s trajectory to become the second-largest wheat exporter globally.
Without Gate, Canada risks weakened market access, a diminished ability to address trade barriers, and the loss of premium markets as grain becomes seen as interchangeable with lower-quality alternatives. We are also at risk of declining reputation, as decades of relationship-building and quality reputation deteriorate, threatening long-term demand and economic returns, and disruptions of service that compromise quality assurance, research, and market development.
Click here to see more...