Ontario Agriculture

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The Annual International Agricultural Conference Canada 2024

Event Details

The Annual International Agricultural Conference Canada 2024

Time: August 16, 2024 at 9am to August 17, 2024 at 4pm
Location: Ontario Science Centre
Street: 770 Don mills Rd
City/Town: Toronto, ON M3C1T3 Canada
Website or Map: https://intagrico.ca/
Event Type: agricultural, conference
Organized By: IACC
Latest Activity: Apr 25, 2024

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Event Description

IACC24 aims to bring together global agricultural stakeholders to foster collaboration & to address related challenges & opportunities.

Mission of this conference is to bring together global agricultural stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, industry leaders, and farmers, to foster collaboration, knowledge exchange, and innovation in order to address the challenges and opportunities facing the agricultural sector worldwide.

Attendees of IACC24 will include professionals at various stages of their careers, from recent graduates to seasoned veterans. They may come from a range of agricultural industries and sectors, and may be seeking to enhance their skills, explore new career paths, or connect with others in their field.

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

Depopulation could destabilize food systems

It’s difficult to argue that climate change isn’t the most pressing threat to our agri-food sector. Farmers, processors, distributors, retailers and transporters have all been forced to adapt in real time to extreme weather events, shifting growing seasons and volatile conditions. From droughts to floods to wildfires, climate change has tested the resilience of every link in the food supply chain. Yet, for all the challenges the sector has faced – and will continue to face – due to climate pressures, it has managed to cope reasonably well. Investments in technology, new crop varieties, smarter logistics and infrastructure upgrades have helped absorb many of the shocks. But there is another looming threat – quieter, slower, and far more difficult to reverse – that few in the industry appear prepared for: depopulation. At its core, the food industry is built on one assumption: that there will always be more mouths to feed. Growth in population has long been a proxy for market growth.

Labour shortages create dragnet for agri-food

Canadian agriculture and agri-food consistently punch above their weight. Agriculture and agri-food contribute $111 billion per year – more than $30 million per day – to the Canadian economy, or over six per cent of our GDP. However, there are still more than 16,000 job vacancies on Canadian farms, and this labour crisis is resulting in avoidable financial strain. With that considered, you would think that smoothing out the regulatory red tape – especially on access to labour for farmers – should be highest priority for federal and provincial governments when the shortage is both critical and chronic, proven with many years of data and evidence. When COVID-19 challenged supply chains, action was taken to secure our food supply, but this level of urgency and priority for the sector appears to have come to an end. Producers and workers need new solutions Agriculture is theoretically prioritized in the immigration regulations, but it continues to be squeezed by on all sides. Agriculture

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