Academia, policymakers and farmers must work together, panel hears
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A forum of leaders in B.C. agricultural technology outlined how the province could become a world leader in advanced food production, during a Conversations Live project hosted by Stuart McNish on Tuesday night.
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The panel was brought together to examine changes in food production and how technology is critical to meeting future consumption.
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According to a recent UN report, the world will need 50 per cent more food by 2050 while climate change will decrease global yields by 25 per cent in the same time frame — meaning agricultural technology must advance to help meet demand.
The panel was comprised of Peter Dhillon, chair of Ocean Spray and member of the B.C. Food Security Task Force; Evan Fraser, director of the Arrell Food Institute and professor at the University of Guelph; Karn Manhas, CEO of Terramera, a company that develops plant-based alternatives to synthetic chemical pesticides and fertilizers; Philip Steenkamp, president of Royal Roads University; Federica Di Palma, chief scientific officer and vice-president of research and innovation, Genome B.C. and Bahram Rashti, co-founder and CEO of Fresh Green Farms and UP Vertical Farms.
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“Not too long ago we weren’t talking about this, but food security has become top of mind in recent times. Food security is national security now,” Dhillon said.
He said B.C. can be a world leader in agritech if academia, policymakers and farmers work together. The B.C. Food Security Task Force is advocating for the establishment of an incubation/acceleration strategy for the agritech sector and creating an agritech institute in B.C.
Examples of agritech include seed genomics, climate-controlled greenhouses, sensor-monitored growing technologies and advanced refrigeration systems.
B.C. produces over 300 commodities including fruits and vegetables, grains and oilseeds, dairy, livestock, poultry, eggs, fish and other seafood and is the most diverse agricultural province in Canada.
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The province also has 150 companies that are active in the agritech sector, including Fresh Green Farms and UP Vertical Farms. Last week, UP Vertical began operating Canada’s first hands-free vertical farm growing leafy greens at a facility in Pitt Meadows.
Rashti said his company uses 99 per cent less water and land than regular leafy greens growers, uses no pesticides or fungicides and recycles CO2 within the facility.
He said this sort of farming innovation will become a necessity in the years to come.
“We have disrupted the system. We don’t have seasonal workers, it’s just in time production,” Rashti said.
Di Palma said B.C. was in a great position to lead the way in agricultural technology because the province has a lot of water, good agricultural land and an incredible amount of innovation.
Demand for B.C.-grown fruits and vegetables is also expected to rise as California produces less.
Fraser said the change in food demand and the upending of the traditional agricultural model was a generational challenge and that technology must be applied to food production.
He said that Canada needed to approach agriculture on a “war footing scale” by investing heavily in agritech and finding ways to secure a steady workforce given most of the food production jobs in Canada are performed by temporary foreign workers.
He said 40 per cent of land-owning farmers are set to retire over the next decade.
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