Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

Attention all Farmers, Retailers and Distributors

 

We are a new import company specializing in fertilizer products, primarily UREA 46 from Eastern Europe.

 

We are importing high quality UREA 46 comparable to Canadian UREA 46 at discounted rates for the Canadian agriculture industry nationwide.

 

We could sell UREA to individual farmers or to a group of farmers at discounted rates. 

 

For orders over 25,000MT we offer even greater discounts. 

 

Delivery time to Canada approx. 3 months.

We can deliver UREA with 46% Nitrogen or other Nitrogen content as per buyer's request.

We can deliver plain UREA or premixed UREA as per buyer's request.

We can deliver UREA in bulk or 50kg bags.

We can deliver granular or prilled UREA.

No need to deal with any foreign suppliers, brokers, foreign regulations, etc. as all orders are placed directly with our company based in Toronto, registered in the province of Ontario and subject to Canadian regulations and standards. 

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me.   

Yours truly,

Ron Schneider
VP Sales

 

AGAR Commodity Group Inc.

35 Finch Ave. East, Suite 206

Mobile:  416-898-4288

Office:  416-271-5273

Fax:  877-261-8303

Email:  ron@agargroup.ca

Views: 1344

Attachments:

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

that sounds good to me.
can you tell us a little bit more about your self, your company and your history.
your mandate and longterm goal?
Dear rein minnema

You are welcome to email your inquiries to: ron@agargroup.ca

Please include your company name, address and complete contact information.

Also provide specific details about your inquiry.

Yours truly,

Ron Schneider,
VP Sales

Reply to Discussion

RSS

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

Minister MacDonald sets the stage ahead of NPF meetings

Ministers and other stakeholders are in Halifax this week

Farm Management Canada launches Canada’s Young Farmers

The platform is designed to support and amplify the next generation of Canadian ag leaders

Watch for the development of Sclerotinia stem rot in canola

Information is OFFERED TO THE PUBLIC FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Environment Canada, and their employees assume no liability from the use of this information.   June surface soil moisture conditions indicate that much of the Prairie canola growing region currently has sufficient soil moisture to support germination of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum sclerotia (Fig. 1). Cumulative rainfall from May 30 – June 28 was the highest in the Edmonton, Lethbridge, Winnipeg areas, and lowest in northern Saskatchewan and the Peace River area of Alberta (Fig. 2). When rainfall over the whole growing season (April 1 – June 28) was considered, the Edmonton area was much higher than average (Fig. 3). Recent heavy rains across the Prairies have significantly increased these amounts. Temperature over the May 30 – June 28 period was highest in southern Manitoba and eastern Saskatchewan and lowest in western Alberta (Fig. 4). For the whole growing season temperatures have

Table Beet Harvest has Begun

Ontario's 2026 fresh beet harvest is underway with a positive outlook and steady supply, reinforcing the province's position as Canada's leading producer of this resilient crop.

Cereal rust risk report April 1 to June 29 2026 stripe rust reported in Alberta and eastern Canada along with leaf and stem rust in eastern Canada

Stripe rust development in Alberta There are reports of stripe rust developing in Alberta, though at low levels to date. The wheat crop is maturing in the Pacific Northwest and will decline as a source of inoculum as it is harvested. The spread and development of stripe rust in Alberta now depends more on weather and crop conditions within the province going forward. No rust reports to date in Saskatchewan and Manitoba Cereal crops in the southern US states have nearly been harvested and were affected severely by drought this crop season. Spring cereals in the northern states are still developing but there are no reports to date of rust infection in these northern states. Crop development in many parts of Saskatchewan and Manitoba is delayed relative to normal, and frequent and heavy rains raise the risk of disease development in all crops. To date though there have been no reports of rust development in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Cereal rusts reported in eastern Canada Colleagues

© 2026   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service