The extraordinary emergence of Canada ’s Canola
industry has been told before, but the fine details are laid out in this
article. In another article we learn
that the oil has the processing versatility of olive oil and is well positioned
to challenge olive oil in the kitchens.
I recall the first news on the oil’s
discovery and I am sure that the health profile mattered little at the
time. It is canola’s great fortune that
its profile puts it at the top of the health list and it gas become everyone’s
low cost and healthiest oil option.
The pleasant surprise is that all
the processing tends to take place close to production. Thus it has been also a driver for those jobs
also.
Competition will slowly sort
itself out, but the fact remains that the ability of this oil to also morph
into a high end product dependent on flavor bodes well for its capacity to face
down any challenges whatsoever.
Canola: Western Canada 's other oil
boom
Published Tuesday, Sep. 20, 2011 6:48PM EDT
Brent Dunnigan is giving new meaning to the term oilman.
He drills for it, but he also grows it in the canola plants that cover
wide swaths of his 7,000-acre farm in southern Saskatchewan .
“I deal in both oils,” he says, wheeling his pickup from a drill rig
outside his home town of Alameda ,
to the golden fields of canola nearby, where the Dunnigans have farmed for 130 years
Since persuading his skeptical father to plant the newly designed seed
in the early 1980s, his farm and others across the Prairies have seen canola
reap the perfect alignment of higher yields and strong prices, driven by
innovative science and rising demand.
A plant that didn’t even exist a few decades ago is now King Canola, a
supercrop that generates a high-protein cattle meal and a vegetable oil that’s
highly coveted for its health benefits. In 2010, the plant was the most
valuable cash crop in Canada ,
with $5.6-billion in farm sales. It bypassed wheat – with $3.5-billion – which,
although enjoying a price surge recently, has often languished from low prices
and shifting markets.
Given all its economic spinoffs, such as transportation and processing,
canola is a $15.4-billion industry in this country. According to the Canola Council
of Canada ,
$14-billion of that activity is generated in the West.
“It’s the one crop that farmers are pretty sure they can make money
on,” says Peter Phillips, a University
of Saskatchewan economist
who studies the impact of agricultural research. “It’s one of our visible and
uniquely Canadian success stories.”
That story seems likely to continue, although a severe global downturn
could cut into growth in U.S.
and foreign markets – as could a narrowing in the pipeline of research and
development money, much of which is spent in Canada .
To farmers like Mr. Dunnigan, canola oil's sharp rise over the past few
decades represents nothing less than a revolution in the fields. In the
Prairies, the crop is as much a part of the national identity as Sidney Crosby
or maple syrup. And in many pockets of Canada 's Big Middle, it has helped
breathe new life into communities facing economic decline.
Profit-making from canola stems from of two landmark research
breakthroughs. In the 1970s, scientists took a mundane plant called rapeseed –
traditionally used as an industrial lubricant – and blocked out inedible acids
to create an oilseed cultivar fit for human consumption. The seeds also
contained very low levels of saturated fat.
The result was canola – short for “Canada oil, low acid.” That was the
new seed that Brent Dunnigan brought home to his dad in 1981.
The second innovation took hold in the 1990s, with the emergence of a
genetically modified seed tolerant to commonly used farm herbicides. That meant
more flexibility and productivity for farmers, as they were moving away from
summer fallow and toward little or no soil tillage. They could insert canola
efficiently into crop rotations, combining it with wheat, barley and legume
crops.
The next big boost came from the customer. While the genetically
modified aspect is controversial – and Europe
has banned the import of canola seeds – canola oil has continued to build
market penetration as health took top place in consumers’ priorities.
In Canada ’s
Big Middle, canola has provided the economic boost that hydrocarbons have often
failed to deliver – a strong value-added component in Canada . Canola
crushing, refining and packaging plants dot the landscape of Alberta ,
Saskatchewan and Manitoba , creating jobs and industrial spinoffs.
Canola has helped build a boomtown about 235 kilometres north of Mr.
Dunnigan’s farm – in Yorkton in Eastern
Saskatchewan, which is emerging as the canola capital of Canada .
Prosperity is evident driving down the wide main drag, known as
Broadway, which is hectic with pickup and transport trucks, many displaying the
names of agribusiness players such as Cargill Inc. and Viterra Inc.
The hub is a cluster of agribusiness operations on York Road , in the industrial north end.
The showpieces are two new canola-crushing plants owned by Winnipeg-based Richardson International,
and by LDM Foods, a joint venture of Louis Dreyfus and Mitsui & Co. Ltd.,
both global trading companies. Between them, the two new plants employ more
than 150 people.
Benefiting personally from this whirlwind is Faisal Anwar, who got his
masters degree in local government from an Ontario university in 2009. It was in the
middle of the last recession and jobs in Central Canada
were scarce. Checking out the Internet, Mr. Anwar discovered Yorkton , a growing city of about 20,000 in a
province that was taking off economically. “It was the sleeping beauty that had
just woken up,” he says.
That was 2½ years ago and Mr. Anwar, 39 and now Yorkton ’s economic development officer, is
sitting on an agribusiness-fuelled expansion. The city is having all the
challenges of growth, he says, pointing to shortages of housing, pressures on
education and medical care, and an ambitious growth plan for the next decade.
For canola processors, Yorkton ’s
advantage is that both the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National railways
service the city. It means the crushing plants can go with either railway,
moving their output with quick turnaround times.
LDM, for example, produces a refined, bleached, deodorized oil that
comes out of the plant ready for consumption, and is shipped to food marketers
in Canada and the United States .
One major threat comes from a traditional rival, soybeans, which
contain a lower proportion of oil than canola seeds, but are relatively richer
in cattle meal. The U.S.
soybean industry, in particular, is determined to develop strains to improve
the oil content.
Canola has also loomed large in the debate about the future of the
Canadian Wheat Board. In past years, farmers have profited in canola’s open
markets, while board-sold wheat has often suffered in comparison. For some, it
is one more argument for killing the agency – although global markets are
probably the biggest factor in the disparity.
Also, canola has generated a value-added industry in Canada , while wheat is exported
mainly in its raw state. It partly reflects the nature of the two crops – wheat
travels better in its original state, which means more milling is done close to
market. Now, the canola industry sees another promising application in
biodiesel production.
Canola’s relative dynamism is also explained by the genetic makeup of
the seeds. Because canola’s properties are so variable, farmers tend to buy new
seed each year, providing incentive for seed companies to invest in genetics.
Much of farmers’ wheat seeds come from their own bins, and wheat remains a more
stable, low-investment product.
This year, through the southern Prairies, wheat and canola crops were
in the same boat – suffering from extremely wet conditions. Mr. Dunnigan was
lucky because his land is high, and he was able to seed most of his acreage –
in a region where many farmers planted less than 10 per cent.
Although the oil he has to drill for is the more profitable business
for now, Mr. Dunnigan says “the one in my heart is my farm. Canola has been a
good business over the years. It’s saved a lot of farms in this area.”
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