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Alberta Beef Producers announces plans to withdraw from Canadian Cattle Association
Alberta Beef Producers announces plans to withdraw from Canadian Cattle Association

Calgary Herald

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Calgary Herald

Alberta Beef Producers announces plans to withdraw from Canadian Cattle Association

Article content Alberta Beef Producers has announced it plans to formerly withdraw its membership in the Canadian Cattle Association, saying the national group fails to meet its high standards in several areas. Article content The non-profit commission, which represents Alberta's cattle producers, said its board of directors' decision to withdraw from the national group, to take effect July 1, 2026, follows 'extensive deliberation' and a strategic review. Article content Article content 'ABP holds high standards for fiscal transparency, governance, and communications, and we expect the same from the organizations we support. The CCA does not meet those standards.' Article content Seeking to clarify its position, Alberta Beef Producers outlined a list of key factors influencing its decision to withdraw from the Canadian Cattle Association, which provides Canadian producers with a national and international voice on policy issues. Article content Among them, ABP wants board seats unfrozen and a change that would match representation to how much each provincial group pays the Canadian Cattle Association. Under an existing freeze, Alberta Beef Producers says it pays over half of the CCA's budget but only holds seven of 24 seats. Article content Article content ABP also says it has 'significant concerns' surrounding governance, recommending the formation of a dedicated governance committee and using an independent third party to complete a comprehensive review of the national organization's governance structure. Article content With 'ongoing concerns' about the CCA's fiscal transparency, ABP wants an elected finance chair and 'an active and effective' audit committee in place. Article content But Alberta Beef Producers has yet to see 'meaningful progress' around the issues it's raised with the CCA or a 'willingness to change,' said Roxburgh. Article content 'We have a duty to Alberta producers to ensure their dollars are invested in organizations that reflect and advance our industry's values,' he said. Article content The ABP says it will continue its financial commitments to the national organization until June 30, 2026, when the current agreement between the two groups concludes.

'Devastated' and 'incredibly disappointed': Alberta beef and canola to be hard hit by Trump tariffs
'Devastated' and 'incredibly disappointed': Alberta beef and canola to be hard hit by Trump tariffs

CBC

time05-03-2025

  • Business
  • CBC

'Devastated' and 'incredibly disappointed': Alberta beef and canola to be hard hit by Trump tariffs

Social Sharing Alberta food producers are bracing for uncertainty in the short term and the potential for a complete reorientation of how they do business in the long term now that U.S. President Donald Trump's 25-per-cent tariffs have taken effect. The United States is by far the largest market for Alberta's agri-food exports, which totalled an estimated $9.3 billion last year. China was a distant second at $2.4 billion, followed by Japan at $1.4 billion, according to data from the provincial government. The beef and canola industries, in particular, are expected to be especially hard hit given how big they are in the province and how heavily they rely on American purchasers for their exports. Each industry is now preparing for any number of potential scenarios that could play out in the coming days, weeks and months. Beef industry 'incredibly disappointed' Dennis Laycraft, executive vice president of the Canadian Cattle Association, said the industry is "incredibly disappointed" by the tariffs coming from the U.S., which had long been considered a "nearest ally and a neighbour." He said Canadian beef farmers and feedlot operators have had "incredible relationships" with their American customers and counterparts dating back to the origins of the industry in this country. The vast majority of Canada's beef and cattle exports go to the United States and Laycraft said the industry is hoping for a quick resolution to the trade war while also preparing for a future where they aren't so reliant on the U.S. He said the industry is also cognizant that the Trump administration's actions don't reflect what all Americans want. "We have lots of great friends, still, in the United States," Laycraft said. "This is dealing with an administration that's driving this particular agenda, going from our most trusted neighbour and customer to, now, a real question mark." Alberta Beef Producers, by coincidence, began its annual general meeting on the day Trump's tariffs kicked in. The organization, which represents about 18,000 producers in the province, declined to do interviews Tuesday but issued a brief written statement. "We are assessing the details of the tariffs outlined today and are conscious that there is still a lot of uncertainty in how these tariffs will impact all Canadians, including cattle producers," chair Brodie Haugan said in the statement. Laycroft, with the national Canadian Cattle Association, said the tariffs will affect the industry across the country but "the biggest impact definitely is going to be felt, initially, in Alberta." "The majority of our cattle feeding and processing occurs here in Alberta and approximately 50 per cent of the industry is based here," he said. Laycroft said some U.S. processing facilities are so reliant on Canadian cattle they may have to shut down in the short term. In the medium term, he believes there is the potential for Canada to ramp up beef processing domestically. "But to do that, we need to create the right investment climate in Canada," he said. "So that's another conversation." He also expects producers will naturally begin to expand their trade with other countries, but it will take a long time to find new customers on the scale of what the Americans have historically been. It will be a challenge, in his view, but also an opportunity. "We need to engage in that longer-term conversation so that we we can be viewed as one of the most credible, trustworthy food suppliers in the world," he said. "And some of the other countries that are feeling threatened by the U.S. right now are are going to be looking for exactly someone who fits that description." 'Devastating' for canola producers Alberta Canola executive director Karla Bergstrom said the tariffs will be "devastating" for the industry she represents. Roughly 40,000 producers in Canada primarily grow canola, she said, including more than 12,000 in Alberta. "Canola is their No. 1 farm cash receipt, so, the biggest contributor to profitability on farms," Bergstrom said. "The reason this is so impactful with the U.S., is because it is our top [export] market for both canola oil and canola meal." Bergstrom said Alberta canola producers have always had a "good relationship" with Americans and there's "a lot of integration on both sides of the border" when it comes to both raw and processed products such as canola oil and canola meal, used for feeding dairy cows. "The companies that the farmers sell to, they're global companies and they've got assets on both sides of the border," she said. "It's an integrated value chain." The timing of the tariffs is especially difficult, she added, because of the uncertainty it creates for producers just as seeding season approaches. "Spring's just around the corner," she said. "Will it strain cash flow on on farms? Will it impact seeding intentions? What's it going to do to the cost of inputs to seed the crop? Are there going to be the supply chain constraints because of this? There's a lot of unknowns at this point and a lot of speculation is that it will not be be good." Tariffs leave 'all 3 countries worse off' Bergstrom's outlook was echoed by the Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance (CAFTA), a coalition of industry organizations that advocate for international trade. "The tariffs announced today leave consumers and businesses in all three countries worse off," CAFTA president Greg Northey said in a release. Michael Harvey, the organization's executive director, said North America's highly integrated system of producing, processing and transporting food was built through decades of international cooperation and the tariff action by U.S. President Donald Trump threatens to unravel it. "CAFTA supports the efforts of the Government of Canada to achieve a lifting of the tariffs and return to focus on a rational, rules-based, free trading system that benefits both producers and consumers, regardless of which side of the border they are on," he said.

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