Question Period Note: ENVIRONMENTAL RESILIENCE
About
- Reference number:
- AAFC-2023-QP-00083
- Date received:
- Nov 22, 2023
- Organization:
- Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
- Name of Minister:
- MacAulay, Lawrence (Hon.)
- Title of Minister:
- Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food
Issue/Question:
Q1 – What is the Government of Canada doing to enhance the environmental resilience of the sector, including adapting to the impacts of climate change? Q2 - What is the Government of Canada doing to enhance sustainable water management in the agriculture and agri-food sector? Q3 - What is the Government of Canada doing to protect biodiversity in the agriculture and agri-food sector?
Suggested Response:
R1 - Through AAFC, the Government of Canada is supporting the sector in increasing its resiliency in the face of climate-related risks. Cost-shared programs between the federal and provincial/territorial governments under the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, help to increase farmers’ awareness and management of on-farm environmental risks and support the adoption of beneficial management practices (BMPs) and technologies to reduce those risks including through adaptation and resilience to climate change.
AAFC supports and conducts science in a variety of areas that enhance sector adaptation and resiliency, including monitoring and improving the health of agricultural soils, developing drought-resilient seed and crop varieties, managing water on the agricultural landscape, and providing producers with the tools to help them better adapt to climate change. AAFC’s Agricultural Climate Solutions – Living Labs brings together farmers, scientists and other sector partners to co-develop, test, and monitor BMPs on working farms to enhance climate resiliency.
In June 2023, the Government of Canada launched Canada’s first National Adaptation Strategy – a whole-of-society approach to reducing climate risks and building climate-resilient communities developed through engagement with provinces, territories, Indigenous partners, and other key partners across Canada. The Strategy includes specific objectives and actions for the agriculture sector, as well as a framework for measuring progress at the national level.
Developing a Sustainable Agriculture Strategy will provide a long term approach to ensuring Canada's agriculture sector is ready and able to recover quickly from extreme events, thrive in a changing climate, and ensure a steady food supply that we all depend on. R2 - Cost-shared programs between the federal and provincial/territorial governments under the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, are critical to protecting water resources and support the adoption of beneficial management practices (BMPs) and technologies, including those focused on protecting water resources and enhancing climate resiliency. AAFC also has a long history of researching, developing and promoting the sustainable management of water resources, including conducting and funding collaborative agricultural research and technology development, and provides timely data and analysis on agroclimatic conditions impacting Canada’s farmers and the agriculture sector through the Canadian Drought Monitor.
Budget 2022 announced $43.5-million over five years plus $8.7-million in ongoing funding to ECCC to create a new CWA, which will be stood-up in 2023. There was also the announcement of $19.6-million in 2022-2023 to ECCC to sustain the FWAP. The timing and other details of the official launch of the Canada Water Agency and implementation of the FWAP are still being finalized by ECCC based on the Budget 2023 announcement. AAFC continues to work with ECCC to identify opportunities to enhance the management of water resources on the agricultural landscape through the CWA and enhanced FWAP.
Other major investments in fresh water in Canada announced in Budget 2023 include:
• $650M over ten years, starting in 2023-24, to support monitoring, assessment, and restoration work in the Great Lakes, Lake Winnipeg, Lake of the Woods, St. Lawrence River, Fraser River, Saint John River, Mackenzie River, and Lake Simcoe (note that this figure includes the $420M announced by the Prime Minister for the Great Lakes).
• $22.6 million over three years, starting in 2023-24, to support better coordination of efforts to protect fresh water across Canada.
• $85.1 million over five years, starting in 2023-24, and $21 million ongoing thereafter to support the creation of a Canada Water Agency, which will be headquartered in Winnipeg. R3 - Canadian food producers are responsible and innovative stewards of the land, and are committed to further support and promote sustainable food systems in Canada and abroad. Biodiversity is essential to producing food, fuel and fibre, to maintaining other ecosystem services like soil fertility, water conservation, pollination and pest management, and to supporting the ability of species and ecosystems to adapt to changing conditions, including to climate change.
Cost-shared programs between the federal and provincial/territorial governments under the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership support the adoption of on-farm technologies and land management practices that can provide co-benefits for biodiversity, including shelterbelts, cover crops, conversion of marginal cropland to grass and treed areas, and restoration and improvement of wetlands and riparian areas.
The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KMGBF) adopted in Montreal in December 2022 includes a number of commitments that implicate agriculture. The agreement includes a commitment to reduce the risk from pesticides on the environment but does not represent a mandatory reduction in pesticide use. AAFC is working with Environment and Climate Change Canada as well as with the sector, Provinces and Territories, and other partners in the development of the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan for meeting its commitments under the KMGBF
Background:
The Department supports climate change adaptation and resilience by supporting farmers in developing and implementing farming practices to tackle climate change and by leading on policy solutions to the challenges of climate change in the sector. AAFC collaborates with provinces and territories through five-year, federal-provincial-territorial (FPT) agricultural policy frameworks to support agriculture sector stakeholders in the responsible stewardship of Canada’s agricultural land and environment:
• Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership (Sustainable CAP) - a new five-year (2023-28), $3.5-billion agreement, including $500 million in new funds. This includes delivery of the $250 million federal-provincial/territorial cost-shared Resilient Agricultural Landscape Program to help producers conserve and enhance the resiliency of agricultural landscapes.
Additional investments outside of the new Sustainable CAP to support the agriculture sector in reducing GHG emissions that also have the potential to produce environmental co-benefits to support climate adaptation, soil health, biodiversity, and water including:
• Agricultural Climate Solutions: On-Farm Climate Action Fund – a $200 million, 3-year fund (2021-2024), with an additional $470 million proposed in Budget 2022 over six years (starting in 2022-23), to support farmers in adopting beneficial management practices in three areas: nitrogen management, cover cropping, and rotational grazing practices. Budget 2023 announced an additional $34.1 million over three years, starting in 2023-24, to support adoption of nitrogen management practices by Eastern Canadian farmers, that will help optimize the use and reduce the need for fertilizer.
• Agricultural Climate Solutions: Living Labs – a $185 million, 10-year program (2021-2031) that establish a strong, Canada-wide network of living labs, bringing together farmers, scientists and other sector partners to co-develop, test, and monitor BMPs on working farms to reduce Canada’s environmental footprint and enhance climate resiliency.
The Government of Canada is developing a Sustainable Agriculture Strategy (SAS) to establish a long-term vision for agri-environmental issues, including climate adaptation and resilience, climate change mitigation, water, biodiversity, and soil health. Consultations for this strategy launched on December 12, 2022 and ran until March 31, 2023. Feedback collected from the consultative process will be used to develop a “what we heard” report in 2023. The SAS will be completed in 2024.
Higher risk transformative science under AAFC’s will help ensure a sustainable, resilient, and profitable agriculture and agri- food sector by 2050. Mission-driven science will bring together multiple disciplines, including economics, social science, and natural science, from across the Department and other science organizations working towards a similar goal, including increasing the resiliency of agro-ecosystems.
The Missions are as follows:
- Mitigating and adapting to climate change
- Increasing the resiliency of agro-ecosystems
- Advancing the circular economy by developing value-added opportunities
- Accelerating the digital transformation of agriculture and agri-food
Additional Information:
• The Government recognizes the vital importance of a resilient agriculture and agri-food sector that is able to adapt to climate change, grow sustainably, and continue to feed Canada and a growing global population.
• We support and conduct science and on-farm programming to help the sector prepare for, respond to, and recover from climate-related risks like extreme weather. This includes developing more climate resilient crop varieties and on-farm technologies to improve water-use efficiency.
• The Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership includes a collective commitment among federal, provincial, and territorial governments to tackle climate change and reduce GHG emissions, protect the environment, and support the sustainable growth of the sector.
• We are also developing a Sustainable Agriculture Strategy which will provide a long-term approach to ensuring Canada’s agriculture sector is ready and able to recover quickly from extreme events, thrive in a changing climate, and ensure a steady food supply that we all depend on.