Banner for Value of Ag Retail Voice to Advocacy

Keeping up with the times means finding sources of information that we otherwise would not be able to access. While these efforts are not new, they seem more intense than they were in earlier days.

I started with TerraLink (formerly Coast Agri) in the Fall of 1979, fresh out of UBC, and the industry in BC was definitely a lot different back then. We did not use the word networking, and the main source of information was fertilizer manufacturer sales representative visits once or twice a year and phone calls in between.

When the WFCDA took shape, our general manager got involved, opening dialogue with people we would otherwise not get to know. We needed to cross paths with people from different parts and ends of the industry and hear their stories so we would be able to keep up with the industry and its regulators. We kept in touch with the WFCDA and then CAAR through the messaging, the Communicator and by attending the Conference.

These days, CAAR, its members, speakers, and editorial are the voices we hear, and proudly, they are our collective voice, a valued source, and a priority. Would that be any different if TerraLink was a multi-plant business with locations spread over hundreds of thousands of farm acres? I don’t think so. CAAR represents us all. The way we see it, the bigger the business, the greater the need for friends in the right places to match.

Am I passionate about CAAR? Good question. I am passionate about agriculture, soils, and crops. So, let’s say passion is already taken. I am motivated by CAAR. Here is how I see it. TerraLink is part of a big industry, and we are a small fish in a big lake. For TerraLink, we could never meet all these interesting people and experience the speakers, forums and trade shows if we were off our own. Being a member of CAAR is a small investment for a big benefit. For much less than the price of a hockey game, hotel, and a fun night out, we can be a member of CAAR for a year. I’ll take the game, too, but with CAAR, I get my industry advocate on the line whenever I want. I can call the office and talk to the executive director or call a board member.

The CAAR office will do whatever it can for a member. The website is good, and we have a great conference with good times to get informed and network. If I hear, “Why join CAAR?” I say, “Why Not? There’s nothing to lose and lots to gain!”

The first time I attended a CAAR Conference, I noticed Dennis Bulani from The Rack was buying half the stuff at the big auction event in Banff at a frontier village. I was gobsmacked. It turned out he needed all those things anyway for his business, so why not buy them at the auction? CAAR got the benefit. Both win.

As a business that wants to be relevant, I needed to see a bigger picture. Management’s job at TerraLink is to run an ag retail and be focused and profitable. We don’t have time to be an advocate or lobby the regulators. That is what an industry association does for its members. It’s simple.

The other day, I was asked what issues CAAR was advocating for. Here is what I am aware of, and I’ll say it, it can be a bit sobering. Here I sit in my house trying to be cool when it is 44c outside in the shade at 4 pm. That’s 111f. The highest I remember was 101f back in the ‘60s. We didn’t just beat the record; we obliterated it.

The local raspberry crop just started to ripen, and a large portion of the industry got toasted plants and many sun-scalded white berries. I am not saying anything one way or the other about the climate change argument, but in my lifetime, I have never experienced these temperatures or this type of crop damage. Whatever is causing it, it is real and seems to have a lot of consequences tied to it. It is not becoming a problem, it is a problem.

CAAR is involved with the latest CFIA initiatives to reduce agriculture’s contribution to our country’s nitrous oxide gas emissions and the impact of the nitrogen and phosphorus that leak out of the rhizosphere into ground and surface waters, causing ecological problems.

Several industry groups, including CAAR, are working with the CFIA, asking us to help come up with responses and solutions and help them hone the means to the end. How does an industry contribute its voice? By being one of the go-to players that the regulators call on, and that is what CAAR is now!

On a larger global scale, CAAR is involved with other national industry groups responding to UN initiatives regarding sustainable and regenerative farming related to climate change, world hunger, the rights of everyone to food security, and more. We are undoubtedly all for a better world.

The ‘but’ is, if the UN, (apparently with the EU already onboard for its jurisdiction) aim to organize a sizeable shift towards organic agriculture in Europe, create fast reductions in pesticide use (see feature article on page 16), food security to each person around the globe, and so forth they need to be ready with a plan to keep that food on the table and the ways and means to do it.

To a Canadian ag retailer, this sounds unworkable and extreme. This is an example of how the voice of mainstream agriculture is essential to bringing a real-world perspective to the topic. Industry organizations like CAAR and Fertilizer Canada are key players in bringing this message to those who need to hear it.

What is CAAR’s approach and our outlook? We firmly believe that the Canadian ag retail industry can meet the challenges set before us. At the top level, Canada wants to be a global leader to tackle the issues by example. The challenge is for us as an industry to be even more current and deepen our approach as much as possible, including values like more sound science, more precision agriculture, furthering existing sustainable soil conservation practices and our ability to change on the fly so that Canada can reach its targets.

We (CAAR) are speaking up already, helping define the targets and challenging some of the messages we hear. Some of this is already happening. There is also good stuff coming out of the changes. Agri retailers will find themselves more deeply involved in soil sampling and applications for precision agriculture but for different reasons related to new crop nutrition management initiatives to help deal with the eutrophication of waterways and gassing off issues. As many know, selling more polymer-coated and stabilized products to achieve these goals is in the works.

Canada is a very large country with huge resources and a relatively small population that can pull the weight of a much larger nation. Who better to be an example, achiever, set some goals, and get it done? Together with our industry partners, CAAR is moving ahead with timely responses, delivering the message, and advocating for ag retail. Now, if you are still listening, don’t you want to be a member of CAAR? We get all this for the price of a hockey night out.

 

steve-loewen

Steve Loewen

Chair Advocacy Committee

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