When the dust bowl hit in the 1930s, it was beyond the scope of any one farm, commodity group or province to tackle on its own. It required a degree of co-operation and working at scale to craft a solution and implement practices that, for a lot of farms, were new at the time—reversing or taking out shelterbelts, instead of putting them in.
What we are seeing now, depending on where you are, is that you're either facing drought again, or atmospheric rivers and wildfires.
The system the PFRA put in place instituted expert knowledge exchange. You'd have agronomists and agrologists who were independent of profit motive going to farms and giving advice to farmers and ranchers. You knew the advice you were getting wasn't just trying to sell you something. It came with a mandate to improve sustainability on farms. Those civil servants were welcomed onto farms, no matter what the political winds of the day were, or what the jurisdiction was. It went on for decades. Those experts were very respected for facilitating knowledge exchange and passing along new information and science to farmers, so they could put in place more sustainable practices.
This is the kind of thing we really need to use as an argument against border carbon adjustments, which one of the members mentioned earlier, because we need to have a strategy in place. We need to have arguments built up, saying that we are taking action on these issues and improving our practices on our farms. This is going to provide the baseline scientific data, as well, that we're going to need to back up those claims.