On August 4, Québec growers staged a news conference in Ste-Clotilde-de-Châteauguay to point to the rain-related damages that have accumulated all summer to berry and vegetable crops. The growers, accompanied by leaders of the Union des producteurs agrioles (UPA), are seeking provincial relief.
Berry growers are worrying about risks of climate change for the 2024 and 2025 harvests, says Michel Sauriol, president of the association of strawberry and raspberry producers. Growers can control drought with irrigation, but they can’t mitigate the damage of hundreds of millimeters of water falling within an hour.
For one, Julien Cousineau received hail one inch in diameter for 15 minutes, shredding 100 acres of broccoli and onions, the night before the news conference. Others in the Montérégie region say that so much rain has been received that the fields are unwalkable and that equipment can’t enter to do crop protection treatments.
“Unfortunately, it’s a perfect recipe for wiping out this year’s work, but for some it’s the work of a lifetime,” said Catherine Lefebvre, president of the Association des producteurs maraîchers.