Tuesday, October 11, 2022
SAVE THE WILDERNESS - A MUSIC VIDEO WITH A MESSAGE
Of Poets & Pioneeers - a book review
by Larry Powell
At first, I thought I had made a mistake - agreeing to review “Of Poets & Pioneers.”
After all, I’m no poet!
The last “poetic gene” in my family seems to have died when my own Grandfather, J.J. Powell passed away in 1953.
But I was soon to discover, one doesn’t need a “poet’s pedigree” to appreciate the values which this work embraces.
Poetry just happens to be the backdrop - a vehicle, if you will - that offers a glimpse into a rare and remarkably close relationship between the author, Bill Massey and his paternal grandfather, “Will.”
Bill’s earlier book, “Of Pork and Potatoes,” details the troubled home he grew up in and helps us better understand why his visits with his grandfather, recorded in this one, provided such a precious haven in his own life.
Woven between the poetic parts are stories “Grandfather Will” wrote about a sometimes harsh life in a British public school and later about the trials and tribulations he faced as a pioneering farmer in Manitoba.
Bill’s own stories and poetry only add to the book’s appeal.
If there were ever to be a literary contest with a “Labour of Love” category, “Of Poets & Pioneers” would definitely be a contender!
Wednesday, October 5, 2022
Disinformation ruins the conversation on fertilizer policy, MPs say
The National Observer
Pervasive disinformation around Canada’s voluntary fertilizer reduction plan makes it hard to have a rational discussion on this critical topic, Green and NDP MPs say.
Investigation reveals Poilievre, populist and pro-natural gas groups spread fertilizer disinformation to whip up outrage against Trudeau
The National Observer
Last month, a video was posted to Pierre Poilievre's Facebook page accusing the federal government of causing high food prices and driving farmers to ruin. The post on the Tory leader’s page laid the blame on "proposed fertilizer cuts" that would force Canadians into an "irresponsible" reliance on expensive imported food.
The video was misleading. Story here.
Saturday, September 17, 2022
Conservative premiers betray feds with fertilizer disinformation
The National Observer
Days after signing a landmark $2.5-billion deal with the provinces and territories to subsidize Canada's farmers, federal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau says she was betrayed by a cadre of conservative premiers. The leaders of the three Prairie provinces, who had supported the pact, echoed a far-right disinformation campaign linked to Canada's Freedom Convoy movement telling farmers the feds were going to force them to drastically curb fertilizer use.
Saskatchewan farmland, new serfdom
By Dennis Gruending
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A PinP photo. |
A man being described as a “farm czar,” owns 225,000 acres of Saskatchewan farmland. That is equal to the size of about 125 farms based on the average farm size in the province.
Is that what we want for rural Canada? Story here.
Sunday, September 11, 2022
Nitrogen Fertilizer: New Report Takes Big-Picture Look
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A farm fertilizer plant in Brandon, MB. Photo by Larry Powell. |
SASKATOON, Sask: The National Farmers Union (NFU) recently released a report entitled Nitrogen Fertilizer: Critical Nutrient, Key Farm Input, and Major Environmental Problem. The report takes a big-picture look at nitrogen fertilizer, details its many benefits and also its negative impacts, and makes the case for optimizing rather than maximizing tonnage.
The report examines the path governments and farmers must navigate as we make our way toward Canada’s 2030 and 2050 greenhouse gas (GHG) emission-reduction commitments. The report is the NFU’s submission to the federal government’s consultations on its target to reduce fertilizer-related emissions by 30%.
GHG emissions from Canadian agriculture and farm input manufacturing are up by one-third since 1990. The primary cause is rising emissions from nitrogen fertilizer production and use. Darrin Qualman, NFU Director of Climate Crisis Policy and Action, commented: “These upward trends in emissions from agriculture and fertilizer are incompatible with Canada’s commitment to reduce economy-wide emissions by 40% by 2030.”
Nitrogen fertilizer is a crucial and valuable farm input that most farmers will continue to use. But rapid increases in nitrogen tonnage in Canada and around the world are creating problems. Canadian tonnage has almost doubled since 2006; Saskatchewan tonnage has quadrupled since 1992. Qualman noted: “GHG emissions won’t go down if fertilizer tonnage continues to go up.”
He underscored the voluntary nature of the government’s 30% reduction target for fertilizer-related emissions, saying: “Contrary to rhetoric from some, governments are not proposing bans or forced reductions; governments are using incentives and cost-sharing programs to get farmers onside with voluntary efficiency measures and rate reductions. Federal and provincial governments have allocated hundreds-of-millions of dollars to fund these voluntary cost-share programs. And as governments help farmers use fertilizer more efficiently, farmers’ costs can go down and their margins can go up.”
The NFU report also details lack of competition in the fertilizer sector and potential profiteering. “Record-high fertilizer prices and company profits cut deep into farmers’ incomes. We can reduce farmers’ dependence and vulnerability and reduce emissions at the same time,” said Qualman.
He concludes: “Defending fertilizer is not the same as defending farmers. Fertilizer companies prosper when they sell as much as possible. Farmers prosper when they use only as much as necessary.”
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For more information:
Darrin Qualman, Director of Climate Crisis Policy & Action
(306) 230-9115
qualman@nfu.ca
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Larry Powell Powell is a veteran, award-winning journalist based in Shoal Lake, Manitoba, Canada. He specialize in stories about agriculture...