There doesn't appear to be any other takers, so I'll jump in.
I was in Mali in 2007, when the first international food sovereignty forum was held in a place called Sélingué, about three hours outside of Bamako. I was a part of that forum and I was on the drafting committee for the final international declaration. There were over 500 people there from about 120 countries, and this was an international consensus document. That in itself is quite a feat, to get consensus when you have 500 people there who are fisherfolk, peasants, big farmers, small farmers, and women, and youth, altogether speaking so many languages. To come up with a consensus document is a wonderful testament to a civilized process in determining what our food systems need to look like.
I would say that a country that is not food sovereign is not a sovereign country and is not a safe country. As a farmer and a consumer, I think we all need to be concerned. I'm certainly concerned about food sovereignty in this country.
I'm one of those people who go into a grocery store and look at where food has come from. It dismays me to see the way we have strawberries from California in February and sweet corn from California in February and March. Before we can even cut our asparagus, we have it from Mexico and Guatemala. We've lost our food culture. We've lost waiting for that first flush of seasonal produce to come into our markets. Our grocery store shelves are laden with peaches and nectarines already, coming from southern U.S.A., instead of waiting for our season. When it comes from Niagara or the Okanagan, it's not special anymore. I think it is of real concern.
Do we need more innovation and technology in our food? I've never heard anybody say, “Boy, I wish this was genetically modified”, or “I wish this were another food with novel traits”. I have to ask again, who is paying and who is profiting? We already have glyphosate resistance in the countryside, where I farm today, and I know Glenn grows GE canola and it works for him in his rotation. But do we need more of it?
There is a three-way rotation in my community and many parts of Ontario. Dwight might find this too. We grow wheat. We grow winter wheat and spring wheat. We grow soybeans. We don't grow corn anymore; we've taken another rotation. I'm an organic farmer, but for my conventional neighbours, are they going to grow Roundup Ready corn, then Roundup Ready soybeans, then Roundup Ready wheat? How do they get rid of the volunteers? You can't get rid of volunteer Roundup Ready corn using Roundup. You have to use another herbicide, and whether you're a conventional farmer or an organic farmer, there is no place in our rotations for another glyphosate-resistant crop.
I am not in favour of it, and it's hard. What I'm asking you to do today I know is a challenge, because we've gone so far down the road in our high-technology globalized industrial food system that we need to ratchet back. For instance, Mr. Valeriote, you mentioned that we're going to have fewer farmers in this country with bigger farms, more industrialized, but there is a movement in this country of young people who are starting to farm again. They're recognizing the opportunity that we have in this country from people in this country who are saying they don't want any more of this crap, that they want to buy food that is grown in their community, or at least in our province or in our country, and they want to know how it's grown and they want to know who those farmers are. There is a movement of young people coming back to the land.
I encourage you to look into something called the Collaborative Regional Alliance for Farmer Training, CRAFT. It is farmers like me who are opening up our farms to young people. I have a young master's of engineering fellow who is working for an engineering firm here in Ottawa who spends two days on my farm--he's there today working on my farm--because he wants to learn how to farm. He wants to be a farmer.