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Province moves to pay farmers who set aside land for conservation
CBC
Farmers in New Brunswick will be urged to leave parts of their land untilled under a new provincial program to motivate conservation.
Known as the Resilient Agricultural Landscape Program, provincial and federal funding will be used to reward farmers who increase the resilience of their farms.
It's in part aimed at reducing tillage, which would allow certain sections of farmland to rest for a season or two, which increases the fertility of the land. The measure will also reward farmers who protect ponds, wetlands, and pollinator habitats.
Specific details of the New Brunswick plan will be released on April 1.
John Russell, with the Agricultural Alliance of New Brunswick, said the program will help both farmers and the environment beyond existing government programs.
Russell said it's only fair for farmers to be rewarded for not using part of their land for the greater good of society.
"For the farmers, if they were farming that area in the past, then that's going to be a loss for them," Russell said. "So it's a payment that could perhaps help them find new land close by that's maybe more suitable or less needy of environmental protection."
He added that losing productive, fertile land could be "quite a detriment to the farm," and changes like that are a lot for farmers to consider.
"Most of our farms are operating on a business model, they've got to make money to keep the farm running. So they've got to look at the economics of it."
Russell said while farmers might want to conserve parts of their property without incentives like this, any acreage that's not used takes away from profits.
"It's sort of too bad that often a farmer that has been doing great practices in the past hasn't been getting compensated, but hopefully this can help compensate for that."
It's often been local, family-run farms that have taken steps to protect acreage in the past, and it's time for them to receive compensation for that loss, Russell said.
"A lot of our farms in the past, I think especially the woodlots, families have protected those because they felt a sentiment to protect those areas. But they never got compensated for it."
In a news release, N.B. Agriculture Minister Margaret Johnson said that farmers are recognized as stewards of the land.