Green Energy Act won't protect prime farmland from solar farms Friday, May 1, 2009 © AgMedia Inc.by BETTER FARMING STAFFThe Ontario Green Energy Act, in the final stages of becoming provincial law, won’t have a provision to protect prime farmland from solar farm development, says Simcoe North’s Member of Provincial Parliament.Progressive Conservative Garfield Dunlop, a Progressive Conservative member, says the topic was raised but the provision was not among the amendments approved by the Legislature yesterday when the Liberal government moved the Bill to its third and final reading. The bill has now passed beyond the stage where such amendments are made, he says.Amy Tan, a spokesperson with Deputy Premier and Energy and Infrastructure Minister George Smitherman’s office, says no formal amendment was put forward. The issue of building on prime farmland “is not something that necessarily needs to be in the legislation, it can be addressed later on through a regulation,” she says.The law gives the provincial government the right to approve solar and wind projects over the objections of neighbours and the municipalities in which the projects will be located.“Here the government’s talking about protecting green land and agricultural space and all this sort of thing with their Greenbelt legislation and then they turn around and right in the Greenbelt I suspect they’ll be able to put in solar farms,” Dunlop says.Farm groups are resisting proposals to locate solar farms on agricultural land near Hawkesbury east of Ottawa, and near Belmont, south of London. The Ontario Federation of Agriculture objects to solar projects on good farmland but supports solar farm establishment in other locations.Dunlop says he has constituents in his riding concerned about the issue too. “We have a case up in Simcoe County where we have a very large, very productive farm that apparently has been leased to some people; they’re going to put in a solar farm and it’s going to use up 260 acres of prime agricultural land,” he says. “I suspect that the solar farm will be built on this prime agricultural land now.”Tan says third reading on the bill begins next week but there’s no timeline on how long the legislative debate will take.Dunlop predicts the bill will be passed before June 4, the end of the government’s spring session. BF Ontario Landowner president fights mischief charge The end of the family tobacco farm
Cereals Canada 2025 Annual Report Highlights $12.8B Exports and Global Market Strength Monday, June 29, 2026 Canada’s cereals sector continued to demonstrate resilience, innovation, and global competitiveness throughout 2025, according to the latest annual report released by Cereals Canada. The report highlights a year marked by robust export performance, expanded market reach, and... Read this article online
Canada and Ontario Invest $12M in Farm Sustainability Program Tuesday, June 16, 2026 The governments of Canada and Ontario are providing an additional $12 million through the Agricultural Stewardship Initiative (ASI) to help farmers invest in technologies and management practices that improve efficiency, lower operating costs, and strengthen the long-term sustainability of... Read this article online
Rappa High-Speed Electric Fencing System Friday, June 12, 2026 Rappa has introduced its vehicle-mounted fencing solution, the Rappa Winder, to the U.S. market, offering a faster and more efficient way to install and retrieve electric fencing. The system reduces fencing time by up to 80 percent, allowing producers to deploy approximately 650... Read this article online
P&H and Picton Terminals officially open new Picton grain facility after months of early operations Wednesday, June 10, 2026 Parrish & Heimbecker, Limited (P&H) and Picton Terminals formally opened their new bulk agricultural marine terminal today, June 10, 2026—an event that marks the public debut of a facility that has already been operating for months. Construction wrapped up in February, with... Read this article online
: Ontario Crops Show Strong Start Despite Weather Challenges Friday, June 5, 2026 Acorrding to the OMAFA fieldcropnews.com, crop conditions across Ontario indicate a generally positive start to the growing season, although dry weather and cool soil temperatures have created uneven growth and management challenges. Corn planting is nearly complete across most... Read this article online