Canada - Étape 2
Main findings
There was broad consensus that many of Canada’s past and ongoing agri-environmental and sustainability actions have improved the climate resiliency of our agriculture and food systems. For example, the widespread adoption of Environmental Farm Plans, high adoption of no-till seeding, and development of agriculture adaptation planning, especially in British Columbia, Quebec, and Ontario. At the broader food system level, there was also general consensus that Canada is sustainable and climate resilient due in part to our food and production systems being highly diverse (e.g. not specialized in
... Lire la suite one commodity, production type, or geographical region). Therefore, there are successes that can be built on and leveraged. However, gaps and challenges to enhancing adaptation and implementing actions were discussed, as were potential areas for improvement and solutions. Some noteworthy suggestions are further discussed below and included the need to develop transparent, clear objectives and goals through a national strategy focusing on climate adaptation and the sustainability of Canada’s food system, with more government leadership. Related to this is the need for dedicated and longer term approaches, programs and technical support for implementation and to accelerate action. There was agreement that accurate and measurable food system metrics are important, should be developed in a collaborative approach, in order to track progress and inform decision making/strategies. This also included the need to improve coordination and investment in data required to develop and refine metrics on climate resiliency, adaptation and sustainability of Canada’s food system. Other suggestions included increased efforts for education and communication ensuring technical transfer of knowledge from research to farmers, food supply chain stakeholders and consumers in formats that enable understanding of climate impacts and potential solutions. Similarly, participants suggested focusing on increasing capacity for local extension and knowledge transfer activities related to climate-resiliency, especially for small and medium producers, farmers, indigenous and remote communities. This includes increasing dedicated support for research and demonstration on climate resilient production practices and solutions (e.g. agro-ecological approaches, nature based climate solutions, new climate resilient crop varieties, etc.) and identifying their effectiveness, cost, benefits and operational impacts related to their adoption. It was further suggested to consider restructuring research support programming related to climate resiliency. For example, the current cost-share criteria between public-private funding to initiate research needs to be more flexible with increased government contributions for public good outcomes, such as adaptation solutions. Discussions also touched on needing to increase support for research, demonstration and programming related to diversifying production systems (e.g. agro-ecological, regenerative and organic production approaches), diversifying and developing varieties of crops better suited to new climate conditions (e.g. winter cereals and different wheat varieties, etc.), and supporting consumer awareness eco-labelling programs. In terms of engaging on food security, opportunities were noted to go beyond historical tendencies of focusing on commercial agriculture and food and ensuring that smaller-scale and aboriginal farmers have the opportunity to be included in dialogues with commercial operations and access flexible programming support tailored to their needs. Indigenous communities require technical support, but traditional knowledge can also help inform adaptation strategies for other producers. Addressing food security challenges needs to reflect Indigenous food sovereignty, respect the principle of self-determination, and recognize that a number of local and traditional food systems are under threat due to climate changes, while traditional knowledge is also being lost. Lire moins