Anastasia Fyke doesn鈥檛 have time for millennials. Sort of.
The fourth-generation buckwheat farmer from Manitoba (and a millennial herself) wants to help farmers transform agriculture from Canada鈥檚 sixth-largest greenhouse gas producer into a carbon sink. It鈥檚 an attainable goal, she said 鈥 with enough investment.聽
鈥淚 hear a lot of flak, especially from my own generation, blaming farmers for all these climate things,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut people aren鈥檛 willing to pay for it.鈥
About of Canada鈥檚 greenhouse gas emissions came from farms in 2018, with the bulk originating from cattle and the degradation of agricultural soil.
Artificial nitrogen fertilizers, which are used extensively in industrial agriculture and emit gases such as ammonia, nitrogen oxide, and nitrous oxides, are also to blame.
Nitrous oxide is particularly potent: It is over more efficient at trapping atmospheric heat than CO2, and accounted for about five per cent of Canada鈥檚 total emissions in 2018. 聽
These emissions are also increasing, climbing 22 per cent since 1992, a trend that鈥檚 predicted to continue over the next decade according to a by the National Farmers Union.
That has farmers like Fyke concerned.
anticipates drought, floods, wildfires, and unpredictable weather will become more common in the next 50 years, threatening many farms鈥 financial and ecological sustainability.
And those natural disasters are only part of the picture, she said.
Canadian farms are already walking a razor鈥檚 edge when it comes to their financial viability, leaving them little flexibility to deal with natural disasters 鈥 or reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.
鈥淭here鈥檚 already so much risk when it comes to farming,鈥 Fyke said.鈥(Farmers) take the bulk of risk, and if you look at their profits, gross profits are going up while net profits are not.鈥
Canadian farmers鈥 debt, like greenhouse gas emissions, has risen exponentially over the past 20 years, more than doubling since 2000 to reach $115 billion this year.
Meanwhile, their net incomes have steadily dropped, hovering below annually since the mid-1980s 鈥 rates unseen since the Great Depression. That鈥檚 because there has been a sustained increase in the cost of farming (fertilizers, fuel, equipment, seeds) while the price farmers get for their crops have remained relatively stagnant for the past 100 years.
The situation has pushed many out of the business altogether. Between 1991 and 2011, the number of Canadian farmers dropped about 25 per cent, a trend that continues today. It鈥檚 also preventing those who remain from pivoting to low-carbon agricultural techniques and, potentially, turn farms into carbon sinks.
鈥淥ur agricultural sector is structured so the costs associated with improving the environmental status of agriculture aren鈥檛 being rewarded by the increased price of food or an increase in the price the producer receives,鈥 said , a soil scientist and professor at Dalhousie University who studies carbon sequestration in agriculture.
鈥淐anadian farmers participate in a global food system that is mostly based on the least cost of input, reducing costs, so it becomes very difficult to add to these costs of production and still be competitive.鈥
But from an environmental perspective, those increased costs are outweighed by the benefits.
Benefits that lie at the heart of Canadian farms: In their soils. 聽聽聽
Healthy soil is rich in organic matter like compost or dead plants, Burton explained. That鈥檚 what gives it the structural integrity that plants depend on to access oxygen, CO2, nutrients, and water. It also plays a key role in the biochemical reactions that help plants thrive, and provides a home to plants and other soil-dwellers.
Organic matter is why growing a garden on an old compost pile works well 鈥 the soil is already primed with the stuff, allowing plants to thrive. It鈥檚 also a cheap and efficient way to sequester the carbon dioxide captured in dead plants into the soil instead of letting it escape into the atmosphere.
鈥淭he biggest impact our farm has had on emissions is just the increase year over year of the organic matter locked in our soil,鈥 said , a mixed vegetable farmer in B.C.鈥檚 Comox Valley.
She relies on farming techniques that minimize the amount of soil she disturbs while consistently adding compost and straw to increase her beds鈥 fertility and structure.
Still, those practices aren鈥檛 widespread. Over the past century, industrial farming has eaten away at the organic matter in soils by cropping farmland and relying on artificial nitrogen fertilizers to feed the plants instead. It remains the predominant model for Canadian farms.
鈥淭hat impacted the function of soils and their health,鈥 Burton, the soil scientist, explained.
It was one of the factors behind the Dust Bowl and it has made farms both less resilient and sustainable.
Those practices have also made many farmers dependent on artificial fertilizers to replace the essential nutrients entwined with organic matter. Fertilizers that emit nitrous oxide, that are increasingly expensive, and lock farmers into a spiral with significant environmental and financial consequences.
鈥淚nvesting in your soil is not something that you will benefit financially from in the short term,鈥 Hamir said.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to be reaping those rewards in decades. But initially, there鈥檚 a cost to that, be it seed or land, that鈥檚 not in production.鈥
She can afford that investment. Hamir owns her farm, ensuring she鈥檒l reap the benefits of better soils, and sells directly to local consumers for a premium price 鈥 a business model that鈥檚 largely insulated from global market pressures.
Many farmers can鈥檛 afford this kind of investment and need to maximize their land鈥檚 production each year. Breaking this cycle of high-volume, industrial production on a national scale will take experimentation and federal support and should as they develop COVID-19 relief funds, Fyke, the fourth-generation farmer from Manitoba, said. 聽
Hamir agreed.
鈥淩ight now, if you鈥檙e a farmer, you鈥檙e probably struggling to earn a living versus implementing innovative, climate-friendly farming,鈥 she said.