
Saskatchewan drought means consumers will soon pay more for pantry basics
The flour you need to bake your bread, the canola oil restaurants use to fry the food you eat and a variety of other products used both domestically and internationally will be going up in price again this year, thanks to the continuing drought in much of Saskatchewan this year.
Some farmers have indicated their crops can only be used for feed this year, other crops are being eaten by pests like grasshoppers, and still others simply can’t grow because there’s been so little rain for so long.
Sylvain Charlebois, the director of the agri-food analytics lab at Dalhousie University, said what’s going on in Saskatchewan right now is going to matter to everyone.
“When you walk into a grocery store there’s always some ingredients in everything you buy… and when the cost of these ingredients go up, food affordability will be affected as a result.”