Farms.com Home   News

Joint Statement on the development of Canada's first-ever Grocery Code of Conduct

OTTAWA, ON- "We would like to commend the agri-food industry on the substantial progress they have made in developing Canada's first-ever Grocery Code of Conduct. We know there has been a significant amount of time and effort dedicated towards this initiative – and we would like to thank you all as we move towards its implementation.

By enhancing transparency, predictability and fair dealing, the Code will help make Canada's food supply chain more resilient. With businesses working together, the Code of Conduct can be even more effective, which ultimately, will not only benefit the industry, but consumers as well.

We strongly encourage all agri-food organizations to participate in the consultations that industry will be leading in the coming weeks so that the Code can benefit the largest number and variety of businesses. It is clear that a Grocery Code of Conduct will be more successful if people see its added value, especially through the accountability its governance structure and its dispute resolution model will bring.

We do recognize that a Grocery Code of Conduct will not address all pressures facing the food supply chain. Issues at stake are very complex and need to consider a variety of conditions and perspectives.

We are supportive of the current process and highly encourage widespread voluntary adoption of the Code of Conduct, so it can be swiftly implemented and help improve the strength and resilience of Canada's food supply chain, while also building consumers' trust."

-  The Honourable Marie-Claude Bibeau, federal Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food and Mr. André Lamontagne, Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAPAQ)

Source : Newswire.ca

Trending Video

Corn Disease Update & Fungicide Timing Tips | Pioneer Agronomy

Video: Corn Disease Update & Fungicide Timing Tips | Pioneer Agronomy

Pioneer Field Agronomist Brad Mason shares a late-June update from western Illinois, focusing on early signs of corn disease and considerations for fungicide applications.

Brad covers key diseases like northern corn leaf blight, gray leaf spot and tar spot—what he's seeing in the field, why 2025 may bring more pressure than previous years and how weather conditions are playing a major role.

Watch for:

Scouting advice

Understanding disease development

Fungicide timing strategies

Why field-by-field assessment matters this season