Thank you very much, sir, and I'd like to thank the committee for this opportunity to speak about the future of the beef industry in Canada.
I wanted to begin by telling you just a little bit about the work that I was involved in, work that resulted in the creation of the Alberta Livestock and Meat Agency, which has radically changed the way the Government of Alberta interacts with the beef and livestock industries in our province.
In 2007 and 2008 I had the opportunity to co-chair a committee for the Minister of Agriculture, the Honourable George Groeneveld, tasked with reviewing the Alberta beef industry. I'm sure you're all aware that 61% of Canada's beef processing and 67% of fed cattle are produced in Alberta. Our exports of beef, pork, and livestock accounted for over $2 billion in 2007, farm cash receipts in 2006 for cattle sales were about $3 billion, and the value of manufactured red meat sales was $3.9 billion. It's an important industry by anyone's standards, but as we all know, it's also an industry in trouble.
When we started our committee work we knew that the higher Canadian dollar had eliminated the industry's historical cost advantage for beef going into the United States. We knew that feed prices had risen by 50% or more. We knew we had restricted access to foreign markets because of the 2003 BSE case. We knew that the industry was dealing with persistent labour shortages, that packers were operating significantly under capacity here in Alberta and were in fact giving signals that they would not continue to operate for longer than two years unless there was a major turnaround for them. We also knew that regulatory costs were adding between $37 and $66 per animal, depending on who you spoke to and which particular livestock sector it was in.
We also knew that environmental issues were having a greater impact on farming operations and their ability to be profitable. We also learned that beef and pork exports had been falling and livestock imports had been increasing since 2005. In 2005 Canadian imports of beef were valued at $301 million, but by 2008 that level had increased to $747 million; $616 million of that was coming up from the United States. Pre-BSE beef exports in 2002 for Alberta were valued at $1.6 billion, declining to just over $1 billion in 2003 when the BSE case hit. What was most interesting was that in 2004 exports of Alberta beef moved back up to $1.5 billion, and of course that was boxed beef, not live. However, by 2007 we were down to total export sales of $887 million, or just over half of what we had been following BSE.
It's a significant issue considering that the Canadian Cattlemen's Association and the Alberta Beef Producers both insisted that what mattered was the fully integrated North American beef industry. However, it wasn't and isn't working well for anyone in Alberta right now. The reason this matters to us is that in the 2002 to 2007 timeframe, the Alberta government invested over $2 billion of taxpayers' money into the beef industry to try to help stabilize it. This is money over and above anything the federal government contributed in payments to cattle ranchers. Industry had come back to the Government of Alberta in 2007 asking for at least $400 million to try to help deal with their latest crisis. It was at this point that the minister asked Jeff Kucharski and I to write a report giving him some direction on what needed to be done to try to assist this industry.
Our major recommendations to our minister were to move from a commodity focus to differentiated products, or, in other words, we have to brand our product. One of the best examples of this would be the Angus breed and what they're doing right now with their ads in restaurants and in stores. They're very successful, and they've been doing it on their own. We recommended that we move to a more diversified export market with less dependence on our single market, which is the United States, and greater emphasis on markets that pay a premium for beef, such as Asia.
We recommended the creation of the Alberta Livestock and Meat Agency to help focus a vision around all livestock and meat produced in Alberta, including beef, pork, sheep, bison, and cervids. We also recommended that we had to meet our international consumer needs, which include things like age verification, traceability, and the ability to track both feed and drug therapy for individual animals so that we can meet the needs of marketplaces like Europe, where they do not want growth hormones in their beef, or Asia, where they want age verification before they even consider buying your product.
We had to view the entire industry as an integrated chain from producer to feeder to packer, with information flowing both ways, to enable the packer to package shipments for specific destinations, but also information flowing back to the producer on the cut and grade of his animal.
We believe that government has a role to play. It is not of constantly subsidizing a private industry but rather assisting the industry with marketing, research, and production. In this instance, production would mean an information system that would give traceability, age verification, and on-farm food safety programs. Research, from our perspective, meant things like looking at genomics or BSE-related research, technology commercialization, and development wherever possible.
Market development meant international and domestic marketing, as well as branding our products as the best in the world and going aggressively after the high-end marketplace. It is not enough to just slap a maple leaf on a package; we have to show the world that our beef is safe, healthy, and of the highest possible quality. We have to allow the marketers to do what they need to do to sell our beef products.
We asked that government funding align with the strategy we had developed, and that meant a complete realignment of the Department of Agriculture here in Alberta, that funding currently being used inside and outside the department for beef or pork had to be realigned into the new agency.
We had to shift the emphasis to longer-term systemic change and eliminate ad hoc payments focused on short-term issues. It is imperative that government stop distorting market signals for this industry, and I believe that every time we come up with another short-term ad hoc payment, that is what we do.
And finally, government had to realign legislation, regulation, and policy with an industry vision.
I also believe that rather than fighting the United States on COOL legislation, we must in fact embrace it. We are three years too late to fight them. Where has our plan been? We have been told for three years that it was coming. Well, it's here, and we don’t have three more years to change it.
Our lack of success on softwood lumber, and even a border challenge on pork a few years ago, not to mention what R-CALF did to keep the border closed, should have taught us that we need to plan better. And rather than preparing to fight this issue now, three years late, we should be bringing in our own legislation. We should be encouraging Canadians to support their own food and livestock industries.
Alberta, under the leadership of Premier Stelmach and Minister Groeneveld, has taken the lead in creating the foundation for a market-driven, customer-focused, differentiated product, and safe and traceable beef and beef product industry. We need the federal government to take a stand, rather than watch and pay for the inevitable decline of the beef industry.
We have to build a new reality, not based on reliance on a low Canadian dollar and cheap feed grains, but by providing a high-quality, differentiated product that matches the expectations of the consumer globally.
We have paid billions of dollars through programs such as FIDP, CAIS, and AgriStability, and still the industry continues to fail. We need to stop investing in the past and begin to put our money to work in ways that will be proactive and ultimately highly profitable to the entire value chain, not its subsections.
We have to stop regressing to the lowest common denominator and move forward on re-branding, on things like age verification, and, more importantly we have to pursue high-end markets for what is arguably one of the best meat products produced in the world.
Alberta has shown bold leadership, but we need the federal government to add its voice and its support to the discussion. Everyone, from CFIA to the Canadian embassies and consulates, needs to play a role, but it must be from a strategic position. We believe that we have found that position in Alberta, and we ask you all not to invent new programs and new payments but rather to join with us.
Thank you for your time.