Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Ontario Agricultural Conference

Event Details

Ontario Agricultural Conference

Time: January 4, 2023 to January 5, 2023
Location: Ag Business Centre
Street: University of Guelph Ridgetown Campus
City/Town: 120 Main Street East Ridgetown, ON N0P 2C0
Website or Map: https://ontarioagconference.c…
Phone: 519-529-7625
Event Type: agricultural, conference
Organized By: Ontario Agricultural Conference
Latest Activity: Jul 19, 2022

Export to Outlook or iCal (.ics)

Event Description

Only 169 days to the Ontario Agricultural Conference

The Ontario Agricultural Conference is a combined effort of The Southwest Agricultural Conference, Golden Horseshoe and Heartland SCIAs and Eastern Ontario Crop Conferences.

AS COVID-19 continues to create many unique challenges including our ability to meet in person we are committed to keeping our agricultural community updated with current and timely information.

Registration will open in November 2022

We will update this event soon as soon

Comment Wall

Comment

RSVP for Ontario Agricultural Conference to add comments!

Join Ontario Agriculture

Attending (1)

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

CFIA placing import restrictions on some U.S. livestock

New World screwworm was confirmed in a Texas calf

Ag in the House: June 1 – 5

Minister MacDonald highlighted ag investments on June 1

Canola Crisis and Cattle Threat Shake Global Commodity Markets

Heavy rains in Canada and cattle disease in the US are impacting crop production and livestock markets, creating uncertainty. Experts warn of supply issues and possible price changes in coming weeks.

Water Based Nanotech Improves Pesticide Use on Crops

University researchers developed a water based nanotech solution that helps pesticides stick better to crop leaves reducing waste improving pest control and supporting sustainable farms worldwide

10% of the Cows, Half the Beef Exported: How Canada Punches Above Its Weight

With just under 3.5 million beef cows and a fed kill shy of 3 million head, Canada raises a fraction of North America’s cattle — but exports roughly half of what it produces as live cattle or beef. Canadian Cattle Association (CCA) General Manager Ryder Lee says Alberta–Saskatchewan cow country, Ontario and Alberta feeding hubs, and U.S. packing plants in Washington, Utah and Pennsylvania are tightly interlinked, making border access and science-based trade rules non-negotiable for producers on both sides. Raised on a commercial cow-calf operation in southern Saskatchewan — just 20 miles north of Montana — Lee grew up in what he describes as “cattle country.” After earning an animal science degree, he spent six years in agricultural sales with Dow AgroSciences before stumbling into cattle industry association work. He spent a decade in Ottawa doing policy lobbying, then served seven years as CEO of the Saskatchewan Cattlemen’s Association before joining CCA as General Manager three y

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service