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Drought prompts Saskatchewan to ask feds for AgriRecovery review

Jul 18, 2023 | 11:17 AM

The effects of the drought being experienced by some Saskatchewan producers now are reaching Ottawa.

On Tuesday, the provincial government announced it has asked the federal government to conduct an AgriRecovery assessment to see what measures can be taken to help livestock producers in Saskatchewan who are dealing with prolonged dry conditions.

The AgriRecovery program is a federal-provincial disaster relief plan that helps producers deal with costs as they recover from disasters.

“Many producers across Saskatchewan are facing extraordinary costs to ensure their animals are taken care of,” Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister David Marit said in a release. “We need to move quickly to consider all relief options, including an AgriRecovery assessment to help producers deal with the challenges brought about by drought.”

According to the release, Marit sent a letter to the federal government on Monday in which he also requested an early designation of the federal Livestock Tax Deferral Program. That would give drought-stricken producers facing possible feed shortages more options as they consider liquidating part of their breeding herds due to the dry conditions.

The province said western and southeastern regions of Saskatchewan have received below-normal precipitation while dealing with warmer-than-normal temperatures.

“In the hardest-hit regions of Saskatchewan, heat waves, limited rain, minimal spring runoff and successive years of dry conditions are all contributing to significant challenges,” the release said. “Concerns include water quantity, access to feed and large grasshopper infestations.”

The federal and provincial governments previously said the Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation is letting farmers divert to feed additional acres of low-yielding cereal, pulse crops, canola and flax.