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Closure of Cereal Research Centre

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    Closure of Cereal Research Centre

    An OP ED by Glenn Tait of the NFU.


    "Closure of Cereal Research Centre part of Federal
    UPOV ’91 Agenda


    The Cereal Research Centre (CRC) is being closed this
    month, marking the end of nearly a century of public
    plant breeding in Winnipeg. It is another sorry
    landmark on the Harper government’s systematic
    path of destruction through Canada’s public
    agriculture institutions.

    Publicly funded plant breeding at the CRC, along with
    other Agriculture Canada research stations and
    several Canadian universities, has produced most of
    Canada’s cereal crop varieties, which are the
    foundation for our multi-billion dollar grain industry.
    According to Industry Canada, approximately 50% of
    wheat and oat acreage in Canada is seeded to
    varieties developed at the CRC -- varieties that
    represent a farm-gate value of close to $2.5 billion.

    The federal government is not only closing the CRC,
    but is winding down all public funding for spring
    wheat plant breeding to make way for private sector
    investment. Ag Canada will allow scientists to
    continue work already in progress, but will not
    support new breeding, nor allow the current work to
    proceed to the final stage of producing the actual
    varieties that farmers can buy. The CRC’s top-notch
    spring wheat team has been broken up, and only a
    handful of Ag Canada wheat breeders remain at the
    Brandon, Swift Current and Lethbridge research
    stations.

    At a 2013 meeting of the Canadian Seed Trade
    Association, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
    (AAFC) Director General Stephen Morgan Jones laid
    out the federal government’s vision: AAFC would
    “vacate” variety finishing; germplasm developed by
    AAFC scientists would be sold to private companies;
    intellectual property rights rules would be redrawn to
    benefit private breeders; and variety registration rules
    would be revisited.

    Yet public plant breeding gives a very high return on
    investment. Studies by University of Saskatchewan
    agricultural economist Dr. Richard Gray show that
    every dollar invested in cereals breeding returns at
    least $20, and often more. When the federal
    government invests $30 million annually in wheat
    breeding it creates at least $600 million in value that
    is distributed among farmers in the form of better
    crops, providing income to pay wages, taxes, and
    check-offs for additional research, while supporting
    agriculture-related businesses in rural communities
    and helping processors and consumers who benefit
    from better wheat.

    When private companies invest, however, most of
    these high returns go to private shareholders – a
    majority being wealthy non-Canadians. In the case of
    genetically modified canola, soy and corn, gene
    patents, hybridization and contracts ensure
    companies can hold onto most, if not all of the
    returns by forcing farmers to buy expensive new seed
    each year.

    Dr. Gray’s research not only shows high returns to
    investment in plant breeding, but also documents
    that when private seed companies are involved (as is
    the case in canola) they reinvest only a small portion
    of their returns into new research. Research by Dr. R.
    J. Graf shows that private breeding is also less
    economically efficient – a comparable yield increase
    was achieved in wheat for a $25 million annual public
    investment but required $80 million private dollars in
    canola breeding.

    Whether the federal government has decided to bring
    in UPOV ’91 via Bill C-18 in spite of -- or because of
    -- this disparity in how returns to plant breeding are
    distributed, it will guarantee the likes of Bayer,
    Syngenta, Monsanto and Dow a massive new revenue
    stream. By de-funding and vacating public spring
    wheat breeding, the federal government is handing
    these companies an incredibly lucrative new source of
    profits.

    Under this new funding policy and the UPOV ’91 Plant
    Breeders Regime that underpins it, Canadian grain
    farmers not only lose the future varieties that the CRC
    would have developed, but will pay higher seed prices
    and increased royalties, whether on the purchase of
    new seed or as end point royalties on crops harvested
    from farm-saved seed. If changes to variety
    registration rules proposed in May 2013 are adopted,
    companies will be able to deregister older varieties
    that no longer provide them with royalties, forcing
    farmers to choose among fewer and more expensive
    varieties.

    When the Dominion Rust Research Laboratory, the
    CRC’s predecessor, was established in 1925, Prairie
    farmers were fighting for a fair share against the
    oligopolies of the banks, railways and grain
    companies, and we eventually built the Canadian
    Wheat Board as a counterweight with power to act in
    the farmers’ interest. Today, in the shadow of the
    economic disaster the Conservative government
    unleashed by tearing down the CWB, it is now adding
    insult to injury by creating a new seed oligopoly.

    Glenn Tait is a National Farmers Union board
    member. He farms grain and cattle on his family farm
    near Meota, SK"
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