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Pilot project explores how soil organic carbon boosts resilience

Agriculture Financial Services (AFSC) has begun a pilot project exploring how improving soil organic carbon can reduce production risks and boost drought resilience on farms.

The project is part of the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership between the federal government and the province. AFSC’s project is one part of a national initiative focusing on best management practices that could influence how crop insurance evolves.

The project: Exploring soil organic carbon

The soil organic carbon (SOC) best management practices pilot project uses satellite-derived data to evaluate soil organic carbon in fields at the quarter-section level. SOC is the measurable component of soil organic matter (SOM) making up 50 to 60 per cent of its composition.

  • Why is it helpful?

Soil organic matter improves soil structure, water retention, and drought resilience – critical benefits in Alberta’s variable climate. Preliminary AFSC analysis showed that above average SOC levels reduced crop insurance indemnities by $25/ac.

  • What do producers need to do?

Nothing. AFSC has partnered with the Food Water & Wellness Foundation, an organization that collects soil organic carbon data. The pilot will compare SOC levels to wheat yields in Risk Area 13 (Vermilion/Vegreville).

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Why Invest in Canada’s Seed Future? | On The Brink: Episode 3

Video: Why Invest in Canada’s Seed Future? | On The Brink: Episode 3

Darcy Unger just invested millions to build a brand-new seed plant on his farm in Stonewall, Manitoba so when it’s time for his sons to take over, they have the tools they need to succeed.

Right now, 95% of the genetics they’ll be growing come from Canadian plant breeders.

That number matters.

When fusarium hit Western Canada in the late 90s, it was Canadian breeders who responded, because they understood Canadian conditions. That ability to react quickly to what’s happening on Canadian farms is exactly what’s at risk when breeding programs lose funding.

For farmers like Darcy, who have made generational investments based on the assumption that better genetics will keep coming, the stakes are direct and personal.

We’re on the brink of decisions that will shape our agricultural future for not only our generation, but also the ones to come.

What direction will we choose?

On The Brink is a year-long video series traveling across Canada to meet the researchers, breeders, farmers, seed companies, and policymakers shaping the future of Canadian plant breeding. Each week, a new story. Each story, a piece of the bigger picture.

Episode 3 is above. Follow Seed World Canada to catch every episode, and tell us: Do you think the next generation will have the tools they need to success when they takeover? How is the future going to look?