“For decades, grain farmers have been dealing with the fallout of long-standing issues that have been left unresolved,” Hepworth said. “Global market instability is exposing cracks across the system, and Grain Farmers of Ontario joining Grain Growers of Canada reflects just how broad these pressures are and why a unified national voice, representing every major grain-producing region, is critical now.”
Ontario is one of Canada’s largest grain-producing provinces and a major contributor to export volumes. With GFO back at the table, GGC now represents 15 provincial, regional, and national grower groups, collectively speaking for more than 100,000 grain producers who steward roughly 120 million acres of farmland and generate about $45 billion in annual export value.
GFO chair Jeff Harrison described the decision as a strategic response to today’s political and economic environment.
“Ontario’s grain farmers are strongest when we stand united with our peers across Canada,” Harrison said. “Rejoining Grain Growers of Canada positions all grain farmers for long-term success and ensures our perspectives are heard as national policies are developed.”
Together, the two organizations say they will work to ensure federal policy frameworks reflect on-farm realities and the consequences government decisions carry for Canada’s export-dependent grain sector. Grain Farmers of Ontario represents about 28,000 farmers producing barley, corn, oats, soybeans, and wheat on more than six million acres, underpinning billions of dollars in economic activity and tens of thousands of jobs across the province.
Source : Syngenta.ca